Los Angeles Times

Child-care providers by day, Amazon drivers by night. Workers fight for living wages

Adriana Lorenzo keeps an eye on her students as they play in a sandbox at her Boyle Heights home day care center on Monday, May 22, 2023, in Los Angeles.

Behind the white iron gate of her Boyle Heights, Los Angeles home, Adriana Lorenzo's concrete courtyard is filled with half a dozen tricycles, a basketball hoop and the melodic cadences of classical music that resonate through the play area. "It keeps the kids happy and calm," she says.

Lorenzo owns her own child-care program, taking care of 14 children. On a recent Wednesday, she holds baby Elijah, 13 months, close to her chest, swaying back and forth as she brushes the hair from his eyes. Lorenzo has been working since 5 a.m., when she got up to sanitize the bathrooms and cook pancakes and eggs for the children before they began arriving at 6:30 a.m. Her last charge won't head home until after 5:30 p.m.

She works 13 hours a day, five days a week, wiping tears, kissing owies, teaching the ABCs, and bending over to pick up countless toys. Nearly all her children come from low-income families and qualify for state vouchers that pay for the care. The rate varies by the age of a child, but for a 2-year-old, Lorenzo up to $1,006 per

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