"We've always been full with children, but we could refer them to other centers or if we said we didn't have room, they would go somewhere else," says Kim Helaire-Smith, director of Kids Are Us in Las Vegas.
"But when they call me now, it's like, we've already called everywhere, and we are just getting everyone's waitlist."
Helaire-Smith tells KTNV that the childcare center is at capacity and even has a waitlist.
The problem is exacerbated by the fact that many in the industry have left over the last few years due to a variety of reasons, including the Covid-19 virus.
"A lot of these people that I've just hired, they had no idea that they were in childcare," Helaire-Smith says.
"It saddens me, it really does, because you can hear it in their voice."
A draft childcare policy report from Nevada's Governor's Office of Workforce Innovation notes that 74% of the state's children under the age of 5 don't have a licensed childcare spot available to them, KTNV reports.
The report also notes that childcare centers are having to recruit people who have never worked with children.
And it's not just
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