Tuesday, January 27, 2026

Rural communities develop child care models that can be reshaped to fit a community's unique needs

Medicine Lodge Daycare shares its building with
four other childcare providers.

As rural parents and government officials partner to address child care provider shortages, new business models that allow would-be home or niche child care providers to operate in non-residential buildings are catching on, reports Anne Vilen of The Daily Yonder. The innovative approaches are providing jobs, child care spots and in some cases, reinvigorating rural downtown spaces. 

The story of LeyAnn Gehlen-Wampler of Medicine Lodge, Kansas, serves as an example. After the birth of her first child, Gehlen-Wampler couldn't find a child care provider. She was considering opening her own child care center when "she met Julie Warner, an early childhood consultant for the city who had once been a family childcare provider herself," Vilen explains.

Gehlen-Wampler and Warner, along with city administrators, smart design and construction professionals, and a mix of grant funding, helped create a "cluster of small, fully equipped childcare businesses in a main street building," Vilen reports. "Although Gehlen-Wampler's Medicine Lodge Daycare occupies a commercial space in the heart of downtown, the building was renovated into five separate rooms with separate entrances and outside playgrounds ideal for five independent family childcare providers."

The child care complex has helped the town's economy too. Medicine Lodge city councilman Matt Forsyth told the Yonder, “What it means for downtown is huge. It keeps Main Street alive in a small town where most main streets are dying."

Now known as the "plex" model, creating more modular child care centers outside of a residential home can't be done in all states. Vilen writes, "Kansas is one of just seven states (the others are Alaska, Missouri, Idaho, Mississippi, Nevada and Wisconsin) that allow family childcare providers to operate in non-residential settings such as schools, businesses, or hospitals."

Other rural areas are developing child care options similar to the complex structure but tailored to their specific needs. In Indiana, communities are participating in a "Micro-Facility Pilot program that launched in early 2025," Vilen adds. "Six existing child care centers applied to open smaller satellites in rural or small town libraries, schools, and shopping centers." 

Providers in Minnesota are experimenting with "child care pods," Vilen reports. "They allow children to bring their own lunches and snacks, support mixed-age groups, and draw on the resources of the larger micro-facility hub for staffing and administrative support."

No comments: