Children at Turquoise Child Development Center spend their days reading with tutors, conducting hands-on science experiments, and honing literacy skills long before kindergarten. The center serves about 40 children from the Tucumcari area, providing child care that many parents say is transformative.
Spaces are limited, however. And the demand far exceeds capacity. In rural communities, the situation can be even worse.
The situation is particularly difficult for families searching for infant care because infant programs are among the least financially viable services in child care. Providers say caring for infants requires more personnel, tighter supervision, and higher operating costs.
The result is a system where parents often spend months on waiting lists or drive long distances to find available child care.
New Mexico has spent many years becoming a national model for early childhood education. The state poured billions of dollars into free preschool programs, child care subsidies, and support to educators.
The state’s effort has expanded access for many working families. New child care centers have been established with new providers joining the system. Thousands of children who lacked early education prior are now enrolled in the programs.
But even as the state celebrates progress, one reality remains: New Mexico is still lacking more than 15,000 child care seats for children under age 6. The shortage, according to the New Mexico Early Childhood Education and Care Department, highlights the growing gap between ambitious public policy and the practical challenges of building a child care infrastructure in the state.
Between December and April, the state has added more than 1,300 child care slots, including about 200 for infants and toddlers. Gov. Michelle Lujan Grisham said child care was “the backbone of creating a system of support for families that allows them to work, to go to college, to do all the things they need to do to continue to lift New Mexico out of poverty.”
Officials said the growth is evidence that recent investments are beginning to change the system. But the progress is not enough to meet the demand. The gap continues despite New Mexico’s aggressive policy initiatives.
Voters approved in 2022 a constitutional amendment authorizing the state to draw an additional 1.25 percent, equivalent to $150 million annually, from the Land Grant Permanent Fund to support early childhood education programs. Since then, lawmakers have expanded access to free preschool and increased financial assistance for families who seek child care.
Advocates describe the investments as historic. But they warned that money alone cannot solve structural problems that have built up over the years.
Child care providers across the state continue to struggle with low staffing levels, escalating operational expenses, and the difficulty of meeting licensing requirements while keeping child care services affordable for working families.
New Mexico’s child care system also remains deeply fragmented. Licensed child care centers usually operate classroom-style in commercial facilities grouped by age. Licensed home-based providers, on their part, may care for small groups of children after they pass zoning, fire safety, and environmental standards.
There are fewer regulations for registered home providers. And they can care for up to four children who do not live in the home. Under limited conditions, state law also allows some caregivers to operate unregistered or without a license.
Supporters of stricter oversight said the uneven structure has created disparities in quality and safety. Others say small home-based providers are the only realistic option in rural areas where larger centers are financially unviable. For parents seeking care, however, the distinctions matter less than availability.
Across the state, the lack of dependable child care has increasingly become not only an economic issue. It has also become an educational one. Parents who have not secured care frequently reduce work hours, decline employment opportunities, or leave the workforce.
Efforts to expand the child care program will continue, state officials said. But for many families still searching for open slots, the promise of universal child care remains unfulfilled — advancing the goal steadily, though still far from complete.
