Project:
The Arkansas Child and Adult Care Food Program: A Study of Factors Associated With Program Participation
Year: 2002
Research Center: Southern Rural Development Center, Mississippi State University
Investigator: Huddleston, Richard A., and Yetunde A. Shobo
Institution: Arkansas Advocates for Children and Families
Project Contact:
Richard A. Huddleston, Research Director
Arkansas Advocates for Children and Families
523 S. Louisiana, Suite 700
Little Rock, AR 72201
Phone: 501-371-9678
Summary:
The Child and Adult Care Food Program (CACFP) is a
Federal food assistance program that provides reimbursement
for meals provided to children and adults in
eligible child and adult care programs. To receive
reimbursements, child care providers must sign up for
CACFP and meet program eligibility criteria. Access
to the CACFP program by the target population
depends on the availability of child care providers and
on providers’ decisions to participate in the program.
Two major types of child care providers are family
child care homes and child care centers.5 In Arkansas,
family child care homes are licensed to serve a
maximum of 16 children at a time, while child care
centers are typically licensed to serve a larger number
of children. This study examines the geographic variation
in child care availability in Arkansas and the
factors that affect child care providers’ participation in
the CACFP.
The 1996 welfare reform legislation introduced a new
reimbursement structure for family child care homes
into the CACFP. The reimbursement rates that apply to
homes in low-income areas or homes operated by low-income
people are similar to those that applied before
the 1996 legislation, but reimbursement rates to all
other homes are at least 40 percent lower.6 The change
in reimbursement rates may have reduced CACFP
participation among family child care homes serving
children from middle-income families.
The authors used 2002 State administrative data on
child care licensing and CACFP participation to
analyze county-level child care provision and CACFP
participation in Arkansas. They also used 2000 Census
data to construct measures of potential need for child
care and for food assistance. In addition, they surveyed
over 900 licensed child care providers in 2002 to
collect information on the factors that influence their
decisions to participate in the CACFP.
The study found that almost 70 percent of family day
care homes in Arkansas participate in the CACFP,
comprising 70 percent of CACFP providers. Child care
centers make up 13 percent of CACFP providers in
Arkansas. The analysis shows that the availability of
child care providers, particularly those that participate
in the CACFP varies significantly across regions of
Arkansas. Family day care homes are concentrated in
the delta region, which is located in southwest
Arkansas and has the highest concentration of poverty
in the State. The authors constructed a measure of
child care capacity in a county, equal to the total
number of children that child care providers in the
county are licensed to serve. They found that child
care capacity as a share of the child population (age 5
and younger) is higher in the counties of the delta
region than in the counties in the rest of the State.
However, because of the high rate of poverty in the
region, the child care capacity of CACFP providers as
a share of the population of poor children is lower in
the delta region than in the rest of the State.
The authors used logit regression analysis to examine
the effect of provider characteristics and perceptions
on CACFP participation by providers. The results of
the regression analysis indicate that family day care
homes are more likely than child care centers to participate
in the CACFP and that nonprofit child care
providers are more likely to participate than for-profit
providers. The longer the provider’s hours of operation
per week, the more likely it is to participate in the
CACFP.
The results of the child care providers survey indicate
that 90 percent of child care providers are satisfied
with CACFP administration. However, about half
reported that the reimbursement rates are not adequate
to cover costs, and about one-fourth reported that the
paperwork requirements are too high. Child care
providers not participating in the CACFP were asked
about the barriers to participation. Almost 40 percent
reported that they do not know about the program, and
one-fourth reported that they do not know how to
apply or that the application process is too difficult.
The authors concluded that many of the providers who
do not participate in the CACFP are not eligible to
receive large amounts of meal reimbursements because
they typically serve few low-income children.
However, the survey results suggest that some potentially
eligible providers do not participate because they
are not familiar with the program or are overwhelmed
by the application process. These findings suggest that
intervention strategies may be developed to encourage
greater participation by eligible non-CACFP providers.