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Unpaid caregiving work can feel small and personal, but that doesn’t take away its ethical value

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Written by: Jen Zamzow, University of California, Los Angeles; Concordia University Irvine
Published: 19 December 2025

Work and family are both central to many people’s sense of identity and how they hope to make a difference. Kobus Louw/E+ via Getty Images

As child care costs outpace wages, more families are facing difficult decisions about whether to scale back work in order to care for loved ones. Caregiving remains the top reason women ages 25-54 leave the workforce.

And it’s not just parents who struggle. Nearly 60 million Americans provide care for an adult family member, and two-thirds say they have trouble balancing their jobs with their caregiving responsibilities. Nearly 1 in 4 working caregivers reported either missing work or being less productive because of their care duties.

When the demands become too much to juggle, some people quit their jobs, cut back on their hours or turn down promotions in order to provide unpaid care. For many households, that’s a financial strain; others save money that way. But even so, the decision can feel heavy – like leaving behind a sense of purpose that extends beyond the family.

These choices force deeper questions: What counts as meaningful work? What do we owe to others, and what’s reasonable to expect of any one person?

For many people, work and family are central to identity and how they hope to make a difference in the world. Men and women struggling with whether to step back from a career may wonder whether doing so is the best use of skills or training. Do we owe the world something “bigger”? As much as we care about loved ones, caregiving can feel too small and personal to matter.

As someone who writes and teaches about ethics and social policy, I believe philosophy can help people see these decisions more clearly. Ethics doesn’t give tidy answers or eliminate the tension between work and care, but it can help us understand their moral value.

‘Too small’?

Today, American culture often measures moral worth in terms of results and impact – where doing good means doing more. In this context, stepping back from a professional career to care for a loved one can feel like a failure of ambition or responsibility.

If ambition is measured by observable progress, caregiving is especially vulnerable to being misread as “leaning out.” Many of the daily tasks of caregiving – feeding, bathing, dressing and driving to appointments – can seem inconsequential. The end result of much of this work is invisible: You wind up in the same place you were before. For all the work that goes into sustaining life, there aren’t many “impressive outcomes” to point to.

A brunette man with glasses holds an infant in one arm as he reaches into a sink in a cluttered kitchen.
Doing the dishes brings you back to where you started, but it also keeps life going. AJ_Watt/E+ via Getty Images

In fact, one of care’s most important benefits lies in preventing outcomes: avoiding injuries, medication errors, hospital admissions, developmental delays, cognitive decline, loneliness, depression and so on. These “nonevents” are easy to overlook. In public health, this is sometimes referred to as the “preparedness paradox”: The better prevention works, the less visible its effects.

Appreciating the full value of care means considering what would happen without it. If the answer is that there would be more risk, more crises or more downstream costs, then care is making a difference. Health care ethicists, for example, use this kind of counterfactual reasoning to evaluate harm and benefit, asking how a patient would have fared without an intervention. Caregiving that reduces vulnerability and prevents suffering is a genuine moral achievement.

Still, helping a handful of people can look minor compared to careers measured by reach or scale. Good care requires a level of presence and attentiveness that just can’t be scaled.

But that isn’t a failure. “Smallness” is actually part of the point: Care is personal – and “personal” doesn’t mean morally trivial.

In fact, there’s a rich philosophical tradition that puts meeting the needs of the people we’re responsible for at the very heart of moral life. Relationships are core to who we are. In care ethicists’ view, attachments to other people are not distractions from morality but expressions of what it means to live a good human life.

Close relationships make special claims on us. Ties with particular people carry moral weight, not just emotions – they give genuine reasons to act. As philosopher Samuel Scheffler notes, it makes little sense to say we value a relationship if we don’t think it places any demands on us. Caring about another person’s needs is part of what it means to care about them.

Attending to a loved one’s needs and interests honors those special claims and imbues care tasks with extra meaning – showing someone that we believe they’re worth our time and attention. Caring for loved ones might be modest in reach, but making another person feel truly seen and valued can make a deep impact.

‘Too personal’?

Even if care isn’t “too small” to matter, it might still seem too personal to matter much to the wider world. But while care is certainly personal, it’s also socially significant.

A young Asian woman reaches around to hug an older Asian woman from behind, as they sit in a sun-lit room.
Seen in the right light, caregiving work shouldn’t feel ‘small.’ travelism/E+ via Getty Images

As care ethicists like Joan Tronto and Eva Kittay argue, caring for particular people reveals something universal about the human condition: Everyone is dependent and sustained by care at different points in our lives. Former first lady Rosalynn Carter captured it simply: “There are only four kinds of people in the world – those who have been caregivers, those who are currently caregivers, those who will be caregivers and those who will need caregivers.”

Understanding dependency as a shared human condition helps explain why care is foundational to collective well-being. Unpaid caregiving in the U.S. is worth an estimated US$1.1 trillion annually, making it one of the largest sources of social support.

However, care has value beyond its economic impact. Care makes family, community and civic life possible, with benefits that reach well beyond the household. As economist Nancy Folbre writes in “The Invisible Heart”: “Parents who raise happy, healthy, and successful children create an especially important public good” – one that will benefit employers, neighbors and fellow citizens.

Treating care as a private matter rather than a shared social good has consequences. It places the moral and practical weight of caregiving on individual families – most often on women. I believe this narrow view unfairly shifts responsibility and also distorts value, limiting society’s sense of what matters.

Policy changes could ease the strain on caregivers but wouldn’t remove the personal choices families face every day. Even in a more supportive system, I believe Americans would need ways of thinking about work and care that give a fuller account of their value. Caregiving’s broader public benefits are diffuse and hard to measure. But recognizing that care sustains not only families but communities too is a reminder that paid work and unpaid care are not opposites. They are both ways to contribute to the common good.

Of course, loved ones’ needs can often be met without career changes. But when families need to make tough choices, it helps to have a fuller picture. Care ethics is not a demand for perfect caregiving or self-sacrifice; it’s an argument that care matters and that people deserve support as they respond to real limits. Stepping back from work to care doesn’t have to mean stepping back from contributing to the world – it changes where contribution happens.The Conversation

Jen Zamzow, Instructor, University of California, Los Angeles; Concordia University Irvine

This article is republished from The Conversation under a Creative Commons license. Read the original article.

Holiday storm inbound to Northern California

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Written by: Elizabeth Larson
Published: 18 December 2025

LAKE COUNTY, Calif. — The Christmas and New Year’s holidays are forecast to be cold, windy and wet thanks to an inbound atmospheric river storm system.

The National Weather Service said the approaching atmospheric river will bring heavy rain to Oregon on Wednesday and Thursday, with lighter rain expected across northwest California during that same time period. 

Beginning on Thursday night and Friday, forecasters said heavy rain — along with gusting wind of up to 45 miles per hour — is expected in Northern California.

For the next week, the National Weather Service is reporting that rain — sometimes heavy — is expected across northwest California.

The National Weather Service’s Eureka office said Lake and Mendocino counties will see lighter rain starting on Thursday, with moderate to locally heavy rain expected this weekend and early in the new week. 

Rainfall will trend through Lake County on Saturday. Forecasters said Lake and Mendocino counties could “be in the bullseye” for a narrow band of moderate to locally heavy rain over the weekend.

Through Dec. 22, the National Weather Service is estimating the following rainfall totals for Lake County:

• Clearlake: 2.73 inches.
• Lakeport: 3.52 inches.
• Upper Lake: 4.59 inches.

The Lake County forecast shows temperatures through Wednesday with daytime highs reaching the low 60s and nighttime lows falling into the high 30s, with periods of morning fog. Winds are forecast on Friday and Saturday.

Email Elizabeth Larson at This email address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it.. Follow her on Twitter, @ERLarson, and on Bluesky, @erlarson.bsky.social. Find Lake County News on the following platforms: Facebook, @LakeCoNews; X, @LakeCoNews; Threads, @lakeconews, and on Bluesky, @lakeconews.bsky.social. 

Longtime Kelseyville Unified School Board member resigns; district seeks provisional board member 

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Written by: LAKE COUNTY NEWS REPORTS
Published: 18 December 2025
Kelseyville Unified School Board member Rick Winer, who served as a trustee for 25 years. Photo courtesy of the Kelseyville Unified School District.

KELSEYVILLE, Calif. — Following the resignation this month of a longtime member of its board of trustees, the Kelseyville Unified School District is now seeking applications for a provisional board member.

The district said the vacancy was created when long-time board member Rick Winer resigned.

“After 25 years of service on our board, Rick deserves to spend more time fishing and less time working,” said District Superintendent Dr. Nicki Thomas said.

Before he retired, Winer was a school psychologist who eventually became a school principal in Upper Lake. 

As a Kelseyville Unified Board member, he served as board president for many years. Thomas noted how much she appreciated Winer’s perspective, as an educator and a psychologist.  

“Rick always put kids first and he helped others do the same. When board members disagreed, he would refocus the discussion on what was best for students and that often brought everyone back together,” she said. 

The new provisional board member would serve through the end of November 2026. The successful candidate will then be able to run as an incumbent for a full term.  

Applications will be available via the Kelseyville Unified website and the district office beginning Jan. 2. The deadline for submission is Jan. 30.

Interviews will be held at a special board meeting on Feb. 10 starting at 10 a.m.

The basic criteria to serve as a Kelseyville Unified Board member include residing within the district boundaries, being a registered voter, having no conflicts of interest that would invalidate service (such as being a district employee) and being at least 18 years of age. 

The role of the school board is to make sure Kelseyville Unified is responsive to the values, beliefs and priorities of the Kelseyville community. The board works with the superintendent to set direction, establish an effective and efficient structure, provide support, ensure accountability and advocate for children in Kelseyville schools.

In addition to helping shape local education, board members receive health insurance through the district.  

The time commitment to serve is about four hours per month. Board members usually attend one regular monthly meeting and occasional special meetings, for which they prepare by reading materials provided in advance. Meetings usually last about two hours. 

For those considering applying for the provisional board member spot, Thomas stressed the importance of working collaboratively with fellow board members, educators, and the public. 

She explained that serving on a school board is not a political post, but a community service. As such, it requires people who can “respect differing opinions and hold confidential information in private.”  

Initial petition filings set to open for offices on June primary ballot

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Written by: LAKE COUNTY NEWS REPORTS
Published: 18 December 2025

LAKE COUNTY, Calif. — The Lake County Registrar of Voters Office said the period in which to submit the initial filings to run for offices in the June primary will begin this week. 

The Statewide Primary Election is scheduled to be held on Tuesday, June 2, 2026, to elect federal, state, legislative and county officials. 

A candidate may submit “in-lieu-of-filing fee petitions”, containing signatures of registered voters in the jurisdiction in which he/she seeks nomination, to offset all or part of the cost of his/her filing fee. 

The in-lieu-of-filing petitions are available between Dec. 19 and Feb. 4 during regular office hours of 8 a.m. to 5 p.m., Monday through Friday. The office is closed on county holidays and weekends.

The deadline to file the In-Lieu-of-Filing Fee Petitions with the Lake County Registrar of Voters’ office is close of business on Wednesday, Feb. 4.

Candidates for judicial offices are to file a declaration of intention before filing for office during the candidate filing period. Prospective candidates may file a declaration of intention between Feb. 9 and March 6, 2026. If an incumbent fails to file, the deadline to file a declaration of intention for that office will extend to March 11 for individuals other than the incumbent.

All candidates for elective office must also file within the nomination period of Feb. 9 through March 6 a declaration of candidacy form, nomination papers and pay filing fee in order for their name to be printed on the June 2 Statewide Primary Election ballot. 

Eligible voters can file for candidacy for the following offices.

Voter-nominated offices:

• Governor;
• Lieutenant governor;
• Secretary of state;
• Controller;
• Treasurer;
• Attorney general;
• Insurance commissioner;
• Member, State Board of Equalization, District 2;
• State Superintendent of Public Instruction;
• U.S. Representative in Congress, Districts 1 and 4;
• State Senate, District 2;
• State Assembly, District 4.

County offices:

• Judge of the Superior Court, Department 2;
• County superintendent of schools;
• County supervisor, Districts 2 and 3;
• Assessor-recorder;
• County clerk-auditor;
• Treasurer-tax collector.

Voters desiring information regarding filing for any of the elective offices enumerated above may visit the registrar’s website or contact the Registrar of Voters office in person at 325 N Forbes St, Lakeport.

The Registrar’s Office also can be reached at telephone 707-263-2372 or toll-free 888-235-6730, and email This email address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it.. 

  1. Rising electricity prices and an aging grid challenge the nation as data centers demand more power
  2. Feimer appointed as Lake County’s new chief public defender
  3. Redbud Audubon Society to host Christmas Bird Count Dec. 20
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