The Atlantic

Why Does the School Day End Two Hours Before the Workday?

This mismatch creates a child-care crisis between 3 and 5 p.m. that has parents scrambling for options.
Source: Steven Gottlieb / Corbis / Getty

This past March, on a Thursday morning before dawn, more than 70 bleary-eyed parents lined up in front of the Parks and Recreation building in South Windsor, Connecticut. Wrapped in heavy coats and clutching Dunkin’ Donuts cups, many of them slouched against the building’s cement walls, while others, exercising a tad more foresight, lounged in foldable camping chairs. Most had arrived around 3 in the morning. The first in line had been there since 11:30 p.m. the night before.

The scene closely resembled the crowds that gather before the release of a new iPhone or outside the box office for tickets, but the reward for waiting wasn’t anywhere near as flashy. The parents had lined up for the chance to register their kids for a before- and after-school program sponsored by the town. The ,”—a play on the old-fashioned “reading, ‘riting, and ‘rithmatic,” with the added “recreation”—serves elementary-school students whose parents’ work schedules don’t align with the ’s 8:45 a.m. start and 3:20 p.m. finish. And braving the cold to stand in line

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