News

September 11, 2025

Pilot Program Provides Direct Cash Payments to Home-Based Providers

In partnership with Home Grown and the United Way of Southwestern Pennsylvania, Trying Together is participating in a pilot program to provide direct cash payments to select home-based providers.

About the Program

The Thriving Providers Project (TPP) – a national initiative spearheaded by Home Grown – seeks to demonstrate how direct cash payments to providers will have positive results for relatives who provide child care to young children. The goal is to reform child care payment policies and influence future decisions around compensation for home-based child care providers. TPP provides pre-selected caregivers with a direct cash payment of $500 monthly, understanding that the support to providers reduces financial stress and ultimately improves the early learning experiences of the children and families they serve.

“I can afford to take the children on field trips,” shared Relative Provider Tywanda Powell. “I bought them school supplies and better toys. I was able to just do extra for the children.” 

Program Participants

Communities with limited access to resources such as affordable child care, transportation and healthcare, were prioritized to ensure support reached families with the greatest need.

Within these neighborhoods, participant selection emphasized caregivers whose roles have had a significant impact on child and family well-being. 

  • Grandparents and great-grandparents raising grandchildren were prioritized for the stability, intergenerational connection, and nurturing environment they provide, often while managing limited financial resources. 
  • Caregivers of children under age five were included given the critical importance of the early years for child development, when consistent care and support have the greatest long-term benefits. 
  • Caregivers providing care during nontraditional hours were also prioritized, as they help families balance essential work responsibilities with the challenge of securing reliable care outside of standard availability.

By centering these caregiving strengths, the program directs resources to families whose dedication and resilience most directly influences children’s growth and stability, ensuring funds provide both immediate relief and long-term community benefit.

“The program not only supports caregivers who are often underrecognized and underpaid but also improves access to reliable, nurturing care for families, particularly in underserved communities,” explains Bliss Letang, director of equity initiatives at Trying Together. 

“Additionally, TPP generates valuable evidence on the impact of direct cash payments, informing future policies and reforms around fair compensation for home-based providers, while fostering stronger connections between children, families, and their caregivers.”

The Thriving Providers Project’s philosophy is based on a belief that people should be trusted to make decisions for themselves. Drawing on learning from guaranteed income initiatives around the nation and best practices in early childhood education, the program’s mission is to support and stabilize caregivers and, in the process, improve the availability and quality of care for children and families. The transfers enable providers to make decisions that are best for the children and families they serve.

Home-based Child Care Statistics

Home-based child care providers are the largest population of caregivers serving the largest number of children, ages five and below. A total of 30% of infants and toddlers attend home-based child care as their primary care arrangement, compared to just 12% in centers, according to the program. 

However, home-based care providers receive little public support, which makes them more vulnerable to financial emergencies or crises. On average, family child care providers work 56 hours per week and earn around $29,000. About 30% of them rely on at least one other job.

For more information, see the Thriving Providers Project Fact Sheet.

News

July 29, 2024

Home Grown Accepting Applications for Family Child Care Cohort

Home Grown is accepting applications for the inaugural cohort of the Enriching Public Pre-K Through Inclusion of Family Child Care (EPIC FCC) initiative. 

Facilitated by the National Institute of Early Education Research, the EPIC FCC seeks to support state, city, county, and tribal government leaders in expanding the participation of family child care educators in their pre-k systems. It also aims to engage family child care educators in these pre-k systems for the first time.

Learn More

Home Grown’s initiative aims to ensure that home-based child care providers can fully participate in well-resourced early childhood initiatives. 

Government partners participating in the initiatives are eligible for:

  • Flexible planning grants of $25,000 to support implementation planning
  • Support of an expert planning navigator with experience in administration of early childhood systems from the National Institute of Early Education Research
  • Learning community with fellow states and local government agencies on such topics as program design and pre-k program standards, pre-k supports, equitable financing, and state/local sector oversight and governance
  • Access to guidance documents and resources, including implementation plans, a compendium of programs and toolkit, and more

Upon completion of the planning period, there may be an opportunity to apply for additional implementation funds.

The deadline to submit an application is 4 p.m. EST on Wednesday, August 21. Those interested in learning more can register for an information session on Wednesday, July 31 from Noon to 1 p.m. The session will help government agencies and partners assess whether the initiative is a good fit for them.