11/13/2025 | Press release | Distributed by Public on 11/13/2025 09:43
| FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE: November 13, 2025 |
| Contact: [email protected] |
| Gov. Evers, DCF LaunchNew Online Tools to Make Navigating Child Care Licensure and Regulation Process Faster and Easier |
| Modernizations to licensing and certificationprocess make state government more efficient, cuttinglicensing processing time nearly inhalf |
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MADISON- Gov. Tony Evers, togetherwith the Wisconsin Department of Children and Families (DCF), today announced the launch ofnew online tools to help Wisconsinites interested in starting a licensed or certified child care program navigate the regulation process, cutting license processing times nearly in half and helping to bolster the child care industry by making licensure and certification more accessible and more straightforward for interested applicants. "Since Day One, my administration has been working to make sure our state government works smarter, faster, and better for Wisconsinites, and by streamlining and modernizing the licensing process for child care providers, we're reducing unnecessary barriers for more qualified, caring folks toget into the profession andsupport this critical industry on which parents, employers, and our entire economy relies,"said Gov. Evers."What's best for our kids is what's best for our state, and these new tools are about doing both by making sure state government is working and working for you." These updated tools continue to build upon efforts of the Evers Administration over the last several years to modernize and bring state government operations into the 21st Century, helping to improve the daily lives of Wisconsinites and ensure state government processes are efficient and accessible for all. Until this year, child care license applications were requiredto be submittedexclusively via hard copy. The new toolsannounced by Gov. Evers today representa significant step in modernizing the child careregulation process and include:
Gov. Evers declared 2025 the Year of the Kid in Wisconsin and has made investing in the state's child careindustry to help fill available child careslots, cut child carewait lists, and lower the cost of care for working families a top priority of his administration and of this budget. Gov. Evers and the Evers Administration fought for a pro-kid state budget that makes meaningful investments in Wisconsin's kids at every stage and every age. In the months leading up to the final 2025-27 Biennial Budget, Republican legislative leaders indicatedthey had no intention of making any direct investments in child careproviders statewide. Gov. Evers, who has been working to support child careproviders and lower the cost of child carestatewide for years, signaled that a budget without direct payments to child careproviders was a non-starter and would force the governor to veto the budget if Republicans failed toinclude these critical funds. After months of negotiations with Republican leaders, Gov. Evers ultimately secureda $110 million investment for direct payments to child care providers in the 2025-27 Biennial Budget, delivering on his promise to ensure providers can continue to receive direct monthly payments to help pay their staff, keep their doors open and lights on, and continue providing high-quality care for Wisconsin's kids and families. The final, bipartisan state budget enacted by Gov. Evers included more than $360 million to support Wisconsin's child care industryand help lower child carecosts for working families, a third of which is in direct payments to providers. Following the signing of the final budget, in August, more than 3,100 child careproviders across the state received a total of $8.7 million via the first round ofdirect paymentsto providersprovided by the governor's$110 million budget investment. Known as theChild Care Bridge Payments Program, this program is similar to the successful Child Care Counts Program, which was launched by Gov. Evers and the Evers Administration in 2020 and helped more than 5,700 child care providers keep their doors open, ensured the employment of more than 75,000 child care professionals, and allowed providers to continue care for more than 430,000 kids. Additionally, in October, Gov. Evers announced that Wisconsin Shares families will see an increase in their subsidy amount, thanks to the governor's investment of over $123 million in the Wisconsin Shares Child Care Subsidy Program in the bipartisan 2025-27 Biennial Budget. With this investment, the maximumWisconsin Shares subsidy rate will be at or above the price of 75 percent of child careslots. The increase, which went into effect Oct. 1, will impact roughly 15,000Wisconsin Shares families, with the average savings per family being around $174 per month. In addition to the $110 million investment in direct payments to child careproviders, as well as the over $123 million in theWisconsin SharesChild Care Subsidy Program, the governor's budget also includes:
Gov. Evers also exercised his broad, constitutional veto authority to partially veto aspects of the budget that were outside of the bipartisan budget negotiations. More information about the bipartisan pro-kid budget signed by Gov. Evers is available here. |
| An online version of this release is available here. |
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| Office of the Governor • 115 East Capitol, Madison, WI 53702 | |
| Press Office Email: [email protected] | |
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