New York Takes Steps Toward Universal Childcare

January 9, 2026

Plus, last chance to apply for Roosevelt’s undergraduate fellowships!

The Roosevelt Rundown features our top stories of the week.


New Year, New Policymaking Opportunities

After a whirlwind week of sweeping new policy directives from New York City Mayor Zohran Mamdani on issues ranging from housing to junk fees, on Thursday New York Governor Kathy Hochul joined the mayor to announce a new statewide universal childcare proposal.

The plan, which will require approval from the state legislature, would direct funding to New York City’s under-resourced preschool program for three- and four-year-olds to make it truly universal, expand to include children statewide, and launch a new program for two-year-olds.

This news comes less than four months after New Mexico’s announcement of its own statewide universal childcare plan, which Roosevelt Program Manager Lena Bilik discussed in a September blog post. In the absence of federal support, these state-level programs reflect the increasingly urgent need for government intervention in the cost-of-living crisis, where the childcare market failure has burdened families and providers alike with unmanageable costs.

Bilik’s previous research on childcare lays out several principles that should guide the rollout of any universal public childcare system:

An infographic titled “A Vision for Universal Public Childcare” lists six principles with icons: Affordable, Universal, Coordinated and Nonprofit, Thriving Workforce, Inclusive, High-Quality, and “Just Transition”. Roosevelt Institute logo appears.

“This victory represents much more than a triumph of city and state government working in partnership,” Mamdani said. “It is proof that when New Yorkers come together, we can transform the way government serves working families.”

Visit Roosevelt’s care economy hub: “Building the Future of the Care Economy

 

What We’re Talking About

Tell your networks: Only three days left to apply for Roosevelt’s undergraduate fellowships!

A smiling young woman reads a booklet at a table, next to a water bottle covered in colorful stickers. Text beside her promotes Roosevelt Network Undergraduate Fellowships, including Forge, RIW, and Emerging Fellowships.

 

What We’re Reading