a child care center director holds a baby in the infant room
It Takes a Village is a special series focused on child care in north central Ohio.

MOUNT VERNON — At Knox Pages, we believe the best reporting happens not just for our community, but with our community. 

That’s why we’re asking you to do us a favor.

Knox Pages, Richland Source and Ashland Source are in the midst of an in-depth reporting project called It Takes A Village: Why Child Care Is Everyone’s Business.

In this series, we aim to explore the challenges surrounding child care in north central Ohio, as well as potential solutions. 

And we want to hear from you. 

Whether you’re a parent, a grandparent, a kinship caregiver, a child care provider, an employer or simply care about the community and its kids — your voice matters. 

We want to know what challenges you’re facing when it comes to child care. 

We want to hear about the child care providers in our area who are going above and beyond. 

Our survey is open through Aug. 1. 

After that, we’ll crunch the numbers to come up with a bird’s-eye view of how this issue is impacting folks in our own backyard. The more people who take the survey, the more accurate that bird’s-eye view will be.

So if you want to help tell the story of child care in Knox County, you can do so by clicking here to take the survey

And if you want a space to build your own village, we encourage you to join the special Facebook group for this series. 

It Takes a Village: A Source Community is a place to ask questions about parenting and child care, share advice and resources, start honest conversations and keep up-to-date with our latest child care reporting. We hope to see you there. 

Why child care?

Local leaders in Knox, Richland and Ashland counties have all identified child care as an issue. 

Across the state, families struggle to find and afford care while child care workers barely make enough to get by

Meanwhile, employers lose out on talent when child care challenges force parents to partially or completely drop out of the workforce.

A 2022 assessment by the Area Development Foundation estimated that Knox County needed approximately 1,822 new child care spots.

The study also found that 92.3 percent of respondents found it difficult to find child care, and 58 percent had someone in their family unable to work full-time due to the need to stay home with a child.

Those numbers, along with an internal study, prompted The Salvation Army to launch a campaign to build a new child care center, which is set to open in January.

We’ll likely be revisiting the project at some point in this series. We plan to continue publishing new It Takes A Village content through this fall. 

In the meantime, we hope you’ll take a few moments to fill out our survey and check out the full series below. Then, we’d urge you to share an encouraging word or act of kindness with a parent, teacher or child care provider you know. 

After all, it takes a village.

Read the full series

Staff reporter at Richland Source since 2019. I focus on education, housing and features. Clear Fork alumna. Always looking for a chance to practice my Spanish. Got a tip? Email me at katie@richlandsource.com.