Child care help: How one solution is catching on in Maine


Miranda Taylor is bucking local and national trends: She has successfully opened an in-home day care.

Taylor Tots Childcare, which started in 2021, operates out of a wood-paneled room attached to her family’s house in rural Canton, Maine. “There’s no commute. I’m here if my kids need me,” she says.

Why We Wrote This

A story focused on

The pandemic brought more attention to the challenges of working parents. In Maine, a new model for expanding day care options is offering one solution to America’s child care need.

On a recent afternoon, Ms. Taylor points to a 2-year-old boy playing in the room. He has been with her since he was 3 months old. His mother needed to return to work but couldn’t find child care in the area. Ms. Taylor saw her post on a local site and offered to enroll him as soon as she could open. 

It’s the type of story that Child Care Business Lab leaders hoped would emerge, given the significant need of parents. The program, run by a community development financial institution called Coastal Enterprises Inc., launched in 2020. Since then, lab graduates, such as Ms. Taylor, have started 28 new child care businesses, serving more than 500 children in Maine. Another dozen are actively pursuing licenses.

The economic ripple effect from any new child care business is obvious, says Charlie Woodworth, executive director of Greater Franklin Economic and Community Development, in one of Maine’s counties. “You see it immediately.”

From the outside, the light peeking through a window of the modest one-story home provides the only clue the day has begun at Kingfield Kinder Care. 

Inside, Jackie Lobdell dotes on the children already in her care. She serves bite-size grapes and cinnamon bread to two diaper-clad little ones, checks on an older girl reading a book, and keeps an eye on her lively 3-year-old, Emilia, whose energy defies the time on the clock. It’s 6:45 a.m.

The first parent dropped her daughter off at 5:30 a.m. The early start helps fill a need Ms. Lobdell says she witnessed firsthand after she and her husband started fostering “Em,” whom they plan to adopt. Back then, she worked at the Poland Spring bottling plant in this central Maine town that otherwise relies on the logging, recreation, and tourism industries. 

Why We Wrote This

A story focused on

The pandemic brought more attention to the challenges of working parents. In Maine, a new model for expanding day care options is offering one solution to America’s child care need.

She and her husband cobbled together a patchwork quilt of child care.

“That didn’t work for my work schedule,” she says. “We were missing a lot of time.”

The experience fueled a longstanding desire to open her own child care center. But the question often holding Ms. Lobdell and other aspiring child care providers back can be summed up in one word: How?

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