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Inside one state’s fight to save child care

Correspondent Rachel Cohen shares her reporter’s log from her trip to Boise, Idaho, to cover their political fight around child care.

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It was very sunny out! I forgot my sunglasses back in Washington, DC.
Rachel Cohen/Vox
Rachel Cohen Booth
Rachel Cohen Booth is a senior policy correspondent for Vox covering social policy. She focuses on housing, schools, homelessness, child care, and abortion rights, and has been reporting on these issues for more than a decade.

Welcome to Field Notes, a reporter’s log that gives readers an inside look into some of our most exciting reporting trips. This first appeared in the member-exclusive newsletter, the Vox Explainer.

Hi, hello!

This is Rachel Cohen, a reporter at Vox, and I’m here to share a dispatch from a recent reporting trip to Boise, Idaho — where a unique and heated political fight unfolded in the world of child care policy. The piece not only looks at a growing partisan divide in child care but also a broader conservative push to deregulate the sector and redirect public funds away from the license-based centers government subsidies have historically favored.

For both time and budget reasons, I don’t get to travel for most stories I work on. In this case though, thanks to a grant from the Bainum Family Foundation to support child care reporting, I was quite fortunate to spend four days meeting with lawmakers, parents, and child care advocates in Idaho. There I worked to understand a very complex, sensitive, and confusing story. In journalism, what I’ve realized over the years is that oftentimes the very act of traveling to a region can signal to otherwise hesitant sources that you are taking this story seriously. It shows you are investing resources into getting it right, which increases the chances that people will help you and talk with you. They see you’re making a greater effort than just picking up the phone, and that really does mean something in this line of work.

Sometimes reporting trips are to collect more vivid detail and description to bring a narrative to life. I wanted to do that, certainly, but this trip was primarily for me to better understand what was really going on, to sit down with people face-to-face, and clarify a series of fast-moving and complicated ideas. I did make a lot of calls. I did review all the existing local reporting before I flew out. And I filed my own public records request with the state of Idaho. But I suspected that going there would prove valuable in being able to report this story better than just doing those things in isolation. Given all the flight delays and other travel complications, I’m very glad that turned out to be true.

You can find the story here. Here’s a look inside my reporting.


Field Notes

SUNDAY, MARCH 9

10:30 am: I flew from Washington, DC, where I live, to Atlanta, and then on to Boise. After dealing with some delays with my flight layover, I finally reached my hotel a little after midnight. The long day of travel gave me a lot of time to review my notes and get ready for what I knew would be a busy week.
At the Boise Airport, I was greeted by a nice reminder that I was surrounded by some famous potatoes.

A sign with a man riding a bike on a mountain of potatoes at the Boise Airport.
A sign that greeted me at the Boise Airport when I arrived.
Rachel Cohen/Vox

MONDAY, MARCH 10

12 pm: My first meeting was at the (very beautiful) Idaho State Capitol, a short walk from my hotel. I learned I was in what is known as the “Gem State,” a nickname first coined when Idaho was just a US territory in honor of all the precious gemstones around.

I sat down with Democratic state Rep. Megan Egbert to learn more about the H243 bill and what she was hearing from her constituents. She was actively involved in the legislative opposition.

The Idaho state flag in the main entrance of the state capitol.
The main entrance really was beautiful, and to my surprise — maybe just because I’m used to stricter protocol — there was no security. Anyone could walk right in.
Rachel Cohen/Vox

2 pm: Later that afternoon, I went over to the Idaho Association of Commerce & Industry, which is basically their state chamber of commerce, and met with the longtime president to discuss how the lack of child care access affects the state’s workforce and economy.

A sign directing to the Idaho Assoc. of Commerce and Industry at the Idaho State Capitol
I turned left. We sat in a big conference room for our meeting. Rachel Cohen/Vox

7 pm: At night, I had some calls with child care providers. Idaho is two hours behind DC, and being able to talk to people in their own time zone made reporting a whole lot easier. Oftentimes people can only talk with the media after work, so coordinating evening discussions was just a whole lot easier on Mountain time.

TUESDAY, MARCH 11

10:30 am: I spent the morning meeting with sources off the record (so I can’t share specifically who), but I can say I had some very clarifying coffee dates. Then I made my way over to Lakewood Montessori, a reputable child care center in Boise where I got to tour and sit down with the owner, Mary, to talk about the proposed bill. It was a beautiful day, and I knew I wanted to speak with as many child care providers as I could while I was in town.

Children’s coats hung up outside of the Boise Montessori child care center
From my tour of the Boise Montessori child care center. It was a really lovely facility, and seeing such cute kids always makes the drier parts of the reporting process worth it.
Rachel Cohen/Vox

2 pm: After lunch, I headed back to the state Capitol where I met separately with both of the bill’s co-sponsors, Rep. Rod Furniss and Rep. Barbara Ehardt. I learned that the bill was going to be amended the next day to restore maximum staff-child ratios, and I spoke with the lawmakers about why they believed deregulation was a good idea in the first place.

WEDNESDAY, MARCH 12

10 am: Today I had several more off-the-record meetings with sources and calls with child care providers around the state.

5:30 pm: I had the pleasure of having dinner with my old editor, Haley, who I interned for 12 years ago at the Washington Monthly. She now lives in Boise with her husband and two kids.

Rachel Cohen with her previous editor Haley in her kitchen in Boise
In Haley’s kitchen!
Rachel Cohen/Vox

THURSDAY, MARCH 13

8 am: My last day in town proved valuable. After persistent badgering, several sources finally agreed to talk, including from Wonder School — a company facing public backlash for supporting the bill — and officials from the Idaho Department of Health and Welfare. I also connected with people I’d talk with further when I returned to DC as more legislative developments unfolded throughout March.

11 pm: I got home and spent another three-and-a-half weeks reporting and writing the article!

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