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Agenda - 01-20-1998 - 9a
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Agenda - 01-20-1998 - 9a
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5/14/2013 3:52:34 PM
Creation date
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BOCC
Date
1/20/1998
Meeting Type
Regular Meeting
Document Type
Agenda
Agenda Item
9a
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Minutes - 19980120
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\Board of County Commissioners\Minutes - Approved\1990's\1998
Work First Plan Approved 01-20-1998-9a
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\BOCC Archives\Reports
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7. Child Care <br />Several major problems exist that compromise the quality, affordability and availability of child <br />care and early childhood education for Orange County's children. <br />Child care costs more in Orange County than anywhere else in North Carolina. The market rate <br />for child care for an infant or toddler exceeds $6,500 a year; for an older preschooler, the typical <br />fee is over $5,400 annually. This means that most parents with preschoolers in our community <br />have great difficulty paying the full cost of child care. <br />Many families who need help paying for child care are not eligible for assistance. Families <br />earning more than 75% of the state median income are not eligible for child care subsidy through <br />the state's child care subsidy program. <br />Child care subsidy can make the difference between work and welfare. Without child care <br />subsidy, low income parents are often faced with the choice of paying 30-40% of their gross <br />income for child care or not working and relying on pubic assistance. <br />The Work First Program requires that most parents to work. Virtually all of the Work First <br />parents who find work will need assistance with payment of child care. As the requests for <br />subsidies increase, Orange County will be faced with finding additional funds for child care. <br />8. Health Care <br />All Orange County residents are within close proximity of two teaching hospitals and major <br />medical centers: the UNC Hospitals and Medical School at UNC -CH and the Duke University <br />Medical Center in Durham. Durham Regional Hospital in Durham also serves Orange County <br />residents. UNC Hospitals, as the major state supported hospital in North Carolina, serves a <br />majority of the state's low income population. <br />Orange County's low income residents are also served by the Orange County Health Department, <br />which has offices and clinics in Hillsborough and Carrboro, and the Piedmont Health Center, a <br />private not for profit health clinic in Carrboro. <br />Orange County has a higher per cent of citizens with health insurance (74.6 %) than the state as a <br />whole (64.5 %). For those Orange County residents in poverty, 49.6% have private insurance as <br />compared to 15.8% statewide. Many of these families are employed by the state, either at UNC- <br />CH or UNC Hospitals. Although they are working full -time and receiving health coverage <br />through the state plan, they cannot afford to pay to have their dependents covered and their <br />wages do not lift them out of poverty. This means that children are uninsured. <br />Although Orange County has a higher per cent of all its citizens with health insurance than the <br />state as a whole, the table below shows that a lower per cent of the poverty population has <br />insurance when compared to the state as a whole. <br />9 <br />10 <br />
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