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1.01.2026

Early Childhood Support Network: A Key Support for Nevada’s Early Childhood System

Little girl wearing red plaid shirt plays with a puzzle while adult female sits next to her.

Quality child care and early education play a critical role in helping young children grow, learn, and feel safe. For families across Nevada, reliable child care also makes it possible to go to work, support their households, and maintain stability. Nevada’s early childhood system brings together programs that support children from birth through age five by focusing on early learning, health, family support, and child care stability.

One important part of this system is the Early Childhood Support Network (ECSN), a program of The Children’s Cabinet. ECSN supports licensed child care providers by offering trained substitute educators when unexpected staffing needs arise. By helping programs maintain required adult-to-child ratios at all times, ECSN ensures classrooms remain safe, compliant, and open for the families who depend on them.

What Is the Early Childhood Support Network?

The Early Childhood Support Network is a substitute care program that serves licensed child care centers and family child care homes in northern and southern Nevada, including Elko. ECSN provides qualified early childhood professionals who can step into classrooms when staff are out sick, attending training, on vacation, or when programs are experiencing staffing shortages.

Each year, the ECSN team provides approximately 15,000 hours of substitute care, helping child care programs meet licensing requirements and continue serving children without interruption. ECSN substitutes are trained in child development, health and safety, and classroom best practices, enabling them to adapt to various settings and age groups quickly.

To ensure high-quality care, ECSN staff receive more than 30 hours of professional development each year. This ongoing training prepares them to support children, work alongside permanent staff, and uphold the standards expected in licensed child care environments.

Supporting Providers Across Nevada

ECSN supports a wide range of child care providers across the state. About half of the providers who use ECSN services are family child care providers, highlighting the program’s importance for home-based programs. Family child care providers often operate with limited staff, making substitute support essential when emergencies or unexpected absences occur.

Preschool-aged children are the most frequently requested age group for substitute services, followed by toddlers. These early years are a critical time for learning and development, and ECSN helps ensure children experience consistency and care even when staffing challenges arise.

Providers consistently report positive experiences with the program. In fact, 95% of surveyed customers say they are satisfied with ECSN services, reflecting the reliability, professionalism, and value the program brings to child care settings.

Why ECSN Matters for Families

When child care programs are unable to meet adult-to-child ratios due to staffing shortages, classrooms may need to close. For families, this can mean missed work, lost wages, or the stress of finding emergency care. These disruptions can have serious impacts on household stability.

By providing substitute educators, ECSN helps prevent classroom closures and keeps child care programs operating safely. This support allows parents to continue working without unexpected interruptions and gives them peace of mind knowing their children are in a safe, familiar environment.

Strengthening Nevada’s Early Childhood System

ECSN plays a vital role in Nevada’s broader early childhood system by supporting workforce stability and strengthening child care programs statewide. By helping providers maintain adult-to-child ratios and stay open during staffing challenges, ECSN supports children’s safety, provider sustainability, and family economic stability.

Programs like ECSN demonstrate how targeted support can strengthen the entire early childhood system. When providers are supported, children benefit from consistent care, families remain working, and communities grow stronger.

Conclusion

The Early Childhood Support Network is a critical support for Nevada’s child care system. By providing approximately 15,000 hours of substitute care each year, supporting both centers and family child care providers, and maintaining high satisfaction among users, ECSN ensures that staffing challenges do not become family emergencies. Through this work, ECSN helps protect adult-to-child ratios, keep classrooms open, and support Nevada’s children, families, and early childhood professionals.


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