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In this episode of the District 3 Podcast, Irvin sits down with two passionate child care entrepreneurs — Shahid Sheikh of Little Martians Learning Center and Jenny Castillo of Casa Castillo — to dig into the mounting crisis facing early childhood providers across Arkansas.
Recently, the Arkansas Department of Education announced sweeping changes to the School Readiness Assistance Program, introducing sliding-scale copayments for families and revised reimbursement rates for providers. Arkansas Advocate While the stated goal is to reduce the child care waitlist and create longer-term fiscal sustainability, many in the sector warn these cuts and cost shifts may push dozens of local centers to close, force layoffs, and reduce care access — especially in underserved communities. Arkansas Advocate
In our conversation, Shahid and Jenny share:
How their centers are being affected by the new copays and reimbursement changes
What the survey of child care providers is telling us about closures and financial strain (including projected $37–38 million in revenue shortfalls statewide) Arkansas Advocate
The human stories behind the numbers: parents who might quit work or drop out of the workforce because child care becomes unaffordable
Their calls to state leaders: from advocating for caps on family copayments (ideally 7% of income) to urging immediate funding support and legislative action
How they’re organizing across the state — and how listeners and local communities can amplify the push for stronger child care policy
Tune in to hear a candid, frontline perspective on what’s at stake — not just for child care owners, but for working families, children, and the future of Arkansas’ workforce.
By Irvin Camacho4.7
1212 ratings
In this episode of the District 3 Podcast, Irvin sits down with two passionate child care entrepreneurs — Shahid Sheikh of Little Martians Learning Center and Jenny Castillo of Casa Castillo — to dig into the mounting crisis facing early childhood providers across Arkansas.
Recently, the Arkansas Department of Education announced sweeping changes to the School Readiness Assistance Program, introducing sliding-scale copayments for families and revised reimbursement rates for providers. Arkansas Advocate While the stated goal is to reduce the child care waitlist and create longer-term fiscal sustainability, many in the sector warn these cuts and cost shifts may push dozens of local centers to close, force layoffs, and reduce care access — especially in underserved communities. Arkansas Advocate
In our conversation, Shahid and Jenny share:
How their centers are being affected by the new copays and reimbursement changes
What the survey of child care providers is telling us about closures and financial strain (including projected $37–38 million in revenue shortfalls statewide) Arkansas Advocate
The human stories behind the numbers: parents who might quit work or drop out of the workforce because child care becomes unaffordable
Their calls to state leaders: from advocating for caps on family copayments (ideally 7% of income) to urging immediate funding support and legislative action
How they’re organizing across the state — and how listeners and local communities can amplify the push for stronger child care policy
Tune in to hear a candid, frontline perspective on what’s at stake — not just for child care owners, but for working families, children, and the future of Arkansas’ workforce.

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