Military Child Care: Services Should Assess Their Employee Retention Efforts
Fast Facts
DOD lets each military service set hourly wages within a specific range for its child care workers. For example, a service may raise entry-level pay for child care workers within the range to compete with the local civilian labor market.
But military officials reported challenges recruiting and retaining these workers, including a lengthy onboarding process and stressful work environment.
The services follow many recruitment and retention leading practices, such as offering financial incentives for new hires and current employees. But they haven't developed metrics to track the results of their retention efforts. We recommended they do so.
Child care facility in Hawaii
Highlights
What GAO Found
The Department of Defense (DOD) provides the military services flexibility in determining hourly wages for child care workers, setting child care fees, and calculating turnover rates of child care workers. For example, DOD allows the military services to determine pay levels within set ranges, and the military services may raise entry-level pay within these ranges to compete with the local civilian labor market. Similarly, DOD policy provides the military services options to adjust the weekly child care fees that parents pay to be competitive with local labor markets or to charge comparable fees with the civilian child care sector. All four military services calculate child care worker turnover the same way and reported turnover rates ranging from 34 percent to 50 percent in fiscal year 2022.
Installation officials reported several challenges that affect the recruitment and retention of child care workers including a lengthy onboarding process. Navy officials said they adjusted the health screening policy to streamline the Navy's process. Other challenges include stressful work environments and limited career progression opportunities. For example, DOD and military service officials identified an increase in children's behavioral issues in recent years that has increased stress among child care workers. To assist with recruitment and retention, DOD and the military services offer several benefits, such as paid annual and sick leave, and recruitment and retention bonuses.
Reported DOD Child Care Worker Recruitment and Retention Challenges
The military services follow most of the selected recruitment and retention leading practices GAO evaluated. However, the Marine Corps does not follow three, the Air Force does not fully follow two, and the Army and Navy do not follow one. Implementing leading workforce practices is essential for successful recruitment and retention of military services' child care workers. For example, the military services continuously recruit year-round and provide financial incentives to new hires and existing workers, but they have not established metrics to track the effectiveness of their retention initiatives. By developing metrics to track the results of their retention efforts, the military services can identify which are most effective at retaining child care workers. Additionally, the Air Force and Marine Corps do not continually assess their child care program needs. By following these leading workforce practices, the two military services could better prepare for their future child care program staffing needs and help meet the child care needs of service members and their families, thus improving military family readiness.
Why GAO Did This Study
DOD operates the largest employer-sponsored child care system in the U.S. It has reported that staffing shortfalls have contributed to lengthy child care waitlists in many DOD locations.
Senate report 117-130 includes a provision for GAO to review DOD child care shortages. This report examines (1) how DOD and the military services set child care fees and wages and calculate child care worker turnover rates, (2) challenges the military services face to recruit and retain child care workers, and (3) the extent to which the military services follow selected leading workforce practices for recruiting and retaining child care workers.
GAO analyzed DOD and military service documents about their child care programs and analyzed selected data. GAO also conducted in-person and virtual site visits to eight installations, chosen for their large waitlists, among other factors. Last, GAO analyzed child care workforce challenges, recruitment and retention processes, and leading workforce practices identified through prior GAO work.
Recommendations
GAO is making seven recommendations, including that the Air Force, Army, Marine Corps and Navy develop metrics to track the effectiveness of their child care program retention initiatives, and that the Air Force and Marine Corps conduct assessments of their child care workforces. DOD concurred with the recommendations.
Recommendations for Executive Action
Agency Affected | Recommendation | Status |
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Department of the Navy | The Secretary of the Navy should direct the Commandant of the Marine Corps to develop and implement a Marine Corps Child and Youth Program strategic workforce plan to document its human capital goals and strategies. This plan should include strategies and activities to address staffing needs as well as elements to ensure the Marine Corps is able to monitor and evaluate progress toward its goals. (Recommendation 1) |
In June 2025, the Marine Corps documented how it plans to implement its strategic workforce plan in the plan's implementation strategy. The Marine Corps also described how it will monitor and evaluate its progress towards meeting its goals. For example, it will collect annual data specific to child care centers and perceived program quality. These efforts will begin at the start of fiscal year 2026. This should help the Marine Corps meet its goals related to child development center staffing needs, as stated in its fiscal year 2026-2031 strategic workforce plan.
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Department of the Navy | The Secretary of the Navy should direct the Commandant of the Marine Corps to develop metrics to track the effectiveness of its child care program retention initiatives. (Recommendation 2) |
The Marine Corps documented specific timeframes associated with the implementation and monitoring of its metrics to track the effectiveness of its retention initiatives. Specifically, as of June 2025, the Marine Corps developed a plan of action and milestones, which lists tasks it needs to complete and the start and end dates to do so. For example, metrics such as turnover and retention rates are associated with specific strategies, such as implementing a child care discount for workers, and due dates. This should improve the Marine Corps' capacity to measure the effectiveness of its child care staff retention initiatives.
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Department of the Navy | The Secretary of the Navy should direct the Commandant of the Marine Corps to conduct a needs assessment of its child care workforce to inform future workforce planning. (Recommendation 3) |
DOD agreed with this recommendation. As of March 2025, the Marine Corps had designed a needs assessment of its child care workforce to inform future workforce planning. The Marine Corps' need assessment includes plans to assess four goals, including employees' intent to stay and quantifying employees' overall satisfaction as a child care worker. The Marine Corps said the needs assessment has been approved by leadership and will be published in July 2025. Once the Marine Corps provides documentation of the final needs assessment and its results, we will update the status of this recommendation.
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Department of the Navy | The Secretary of the Navy should ensure that the Navy improves upon its strategic workforce planning efforts by developing metrics to track the effectiveness of its child care program retention initiatives. (Recommendation 4) |
DOD agreed with this recommendation. As of March 2025, the Department said that the Secretary of the Navy has improved its strategic workforce planning efforts by developing metrics to track the effectiveness of its child care program retention initiatives. For example, these metrics include turnover rates by position types and categories, installations, and child development centers. The Navy also plans to develop a tracking system to monitor turnover and will update its payroll and timekeeping systems to track child care employee absences. The Navy noted it plans to complete this work by December 2026. Once the Navy updates its systems, finalizes its metrics, and provides documentation, we will update the status of this recommendation.
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Department of the Air Force | The Secretary of the Air Force should ensure that the Air Force improves upon its strategic workforce planning efforts by developing metrics to track the effectiveness of its child care program retention initiatives. (Recommendation 5) |
DOD agreed with this recommendation. The Department stated that it would ensure that the Secretary of the Air Force explores opportunities to improve upon its strategic workforce planning. As of March 2025, the Department of the Air Force provided evidence of one metric it had developed: turnover rates for Child and Youth Program staff, by installation. However, there were no other metrics listed that would allow the Air Force to track the effectiveness of its retention initiatives. We will update the status of this recommendation when we receive additional documentation on all the metrics Air Force plans to use to evaluate its retention initiatives and details of how it will track the effectiveness of these initiatives.
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Department of the Air Force | The Secretary of the Air Force should ensure that the Air Force improves upon its strategic workforce planning efforts by conducting a needs assessment of its child care workforce to inform future workforce planning. (Recommendation 6) |
DOD agreed with this recommendation. The Department stated that it would ensure that the Secretary of the Air Force improves upon its strategic workforce planning efforts by conducting a needs assessment. In March 2025, the Air Force reported it had completed its initial needs assessment. In the second phase of the needs assessment, the Air Force said it will identify specific installations at which to conduct focus groups with child care staff by June 2025. It expects to have a final needs assessment report with recommendations by August 2025. Once we review the completed needs assessment report, we will update the status of this recommendation.
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Department of the Army | The Secretary of the Army should ensure that the Army improves upon its strategic workforce planning efforts by developing metrics to track the effectiveness of its child care program retention initiatives. (Recommendation 7) |
DOD agrees with this recommendation. The Department will ensure that the Secretary of the Army addresses this recommendation by developing metrics to track the effectiveness of its child care program retention initiatives. The Army will review and assess existing recruitment and retention initiatives by establishing baseline data and then reviewing and analyzing subsequent data to determine effectiveness. We will continue to monitor the progress of the Army's efforts and will update the status of this recommendation as needed.
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