Working Parents for a Working New York
| Author(s): | Wagner, K. C.; King, Deborah; Dolan, Moira; Mazurkiewicz, Jocelyn; |
|---|---|
| Date Issued: | 2010 |
| Publisher(s): | AFSCME. District Council 37 (New York, N.Y.) |
| Description: | A study of the impact of Working Parents for a Working New York, an initiative to extend access to child care subsidies to low to moderate income working families and offer work-family support workshops, on participants' attendance, work performance, productivity, and retention, based on baseline and follow-up survey data collected from 92 treatment and 77 control group members |
Related Resources
| Affordable and secure child care contributes to a more productive workforce & helps resolve work-family conflict | Fact Sheets & Briefs |
| Workplace partnerships and interventions to promote dialogue on child care | Fact Sheets & Briefs |
| Working Parents for a Working New York [Executive summary] | Executive Summary |
| Child care workshops provide benefits to employees and employers | Fact Sheets & Briefs |
More Like This
| Still nowhere to turn: New York City's continuing failure to inform parents about their childcare rights | Reports & Papers |
| Follow-up Study of Issues Affecting the Duration of Child Care Subsidy Use | Administration for Children and Families/OPRE Projects |
| Evaluation of Child Care Subsidy Strategies: Illinois Site Public Use Files, 2005-2006 | Data Sets |
| Maintaining employment: The impact of child care subsidies | Reports & Papers |
| Patterns of Child Care Subsidy Use in New York City: Care Arrangements, Parental Preferences, and Subsidy Administration Policies | Administration for Children and Families/OPRE Projects |
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