Tuesday, October 6, 2009

Inland child care agency expanding capacity

By MELISSA EISELEIN
The Press-Enterprise

Family Service Association recently opened a new child development center in Riverside and is expanding services at another Riverside site and in Hemet.
And still, the nonprofit agency based in Moreno Valley can't keep up with the need for no-cost and low-cost child care services.
"It's hard. There's not enough money but the need is still there," said the agency's child development director, May Eslava.
In a three ZIP code area of western Hemet alone, an estimated 150 to 300 children are in need of full-day child care, Eslava said.
That need is mirrored in many other Inland communities, she said.
The association operates 13 child-development centers in Riverside, Rubidoux, Mead Valley, Moreno Valley, Hemet and Cabazon, and hopes to one day expand into San Bernardino County, Eslava said.
Story continues below

Melissa Eiselein / The Press-Enterprise
Sarah Valdez, 4, of Hemet, right, traces as Jasmine Pando, 4, of Hemet, chats with her teacher at Family Service Association's childhood development center in west Hemet.
Family Service Association also provides meals for seniors and mental health services to low-income families.
In June, the association bought a former YWCA building in Riverside and plans to triple the number of children previously served at the site.
The Alvord site in Riverside was recently enlarged from four to six classrooms, Eslava said.
In west Hemet, two new classrooms are under construction, which will provide learning opportunities for an additional 48 children ages 3 to 5. The classrooms are expected to open in October, Eslava said.
The additions are being funded through government grants, she said.
Krystal Morley, of Hemet, said the child development center has been a blessing for her family, including her 4-year-old grandson Jamesyn Hunsucker.
"My son is a single dad and he has three kids. Without this place, Jamesyn would have nowhere to go but with me," Morley said. "I have an illness and it's hard to take care of him by myself."
Day care is not the only reason to enroll a child in one of the centers, Eslava said.
"Teachers are not baby sitters," Eslava said. "Even in the infant classroom we have curriculum. If the baby needs to learn to crawl, we give them an activity to support that."
Hemet hairdresser Maria Corral said the low-cost child care program allows her to go to work, while providing a valuable education for her 4-year-old son, Ernesto.
"I have him here mainly to learn English. I don't speak English to him at home. I don't want him to forget his mother language. I want him to be bilingual," Corral said. "When he comes home, he tells me his colors in English and I tell him what they are in Spanish."
For the full-day program, parents must have a job or be seeking employment. They also must meet state income qualification, which are based on the household size. For the half-day program, parents only need to meet the income guidelines, Eslava said.

Early learning centers
Family Service Association operates 13 child-development centers in Riverside County.

Cabazon
Cabazon Child Development Center, 14580 S. Broadway St., 951-849-7535

Hemet Child Development Center, 41931 E. Florida Ave., 951-925-2160

West Hemet Child Development Center, 790 W. Acacia Ave., 951-925-2160

Mead Valley
Mead Valley Child Development Center, 21091 Rider St., 951-657-2889

Moreno Valley
Alessandro Child Development Center, 23750 Alessandro Blvd., Suite G101, 951-653-6100
Hemlock Child Development Center, 23270 Hemlock Ave., 951-786-3985
Moreno Valley Child Development Center, 21250 Box Springs Road, 951-786-3985

Riverside

Alvord Child Development Center, 8230 Wells Ave., 951-637-5587

Arlanza Child Development Center, 7940 Philbin Ave., 951-352-2810

Highgrove Child Development Center, 459 Center St., 951-369-0979

La Sierra Child Development Center, 4601 Pierce St., 951-343-0979

Magnolia Child Development Center, 8172 Magnolia Ave., 951- 687-9922

Rubidoux Child Development Center, 5765 42nd St., 951-274-7940
Inland child care agency expanding capacity

By MELISSA EISELEIN
The Press-Enterprise

Family Service Association recently opened a new child development center in Riverside and is expanding services at another Riverside site and in Hemet.
And still, the nonprofit agency based in Moreno Valley can't keep up with the need for no-cost and low-cost child care services.
"It's hard. There's not enough money but the need is still there," said the agency's child development director, May Eslava.
In a three ZIP code area of western Hemet alone, an estimated 150 to 300 children are in need of full-day child care, Eslava said.
That need is mirrored in many other Inland communities, she said.
The association operates 13 child-development centers in Riverside, Rubidoux, Mead Valley, Moreno Valley, Hemet and Cabazon, and hopes to one day expand into San Bernardino County, Eslava said.
Story continues below

Melissa Eiselein / The Press-Enterprise
Sarah Valdez, 4, of Hemet, right, traces as Jasmine Pando, 4, of Hemet, chats with her teacher at Family Service Association's childhood development center in west Hemet.
Family Service Association also provides meals for seniors and mental health services to low-income families.
In June, the association bought a former YWCA building in Riverside and plans to triple the number of children previously served at the site.
The Alvord site in Riverside was recently enlarged from four to six classrooms, Eslava said.
In west Hemet, two new classrooms are under construction, which will provide learning opportunities for an additional 48 children ages 3 to 5. The classrooms are expected to open in October, Eslava said.
The additions are being funded through government grants, she said.
Krystal Morley, of Hemet, said the child development center has been a blessing for her family, including her 4-year-old grandson Jamesyn Hunsucker.
"My son is a single dad and he has three kids. Without this place, Jamesyn would have nowhere to go but with me," Morley said. "I have an illness and it's hard to take care of him by myself."
Day care is not the only reason to enroll a child in one of the centers, Eslava said.
"Teachers are not baby sitters," Eslava said. "Even in the infant classroom we have curriculum. If the baby needs to learn to crawl, we give them an activity to support that."
Hemet hairdresser Maria Corral said the low-cost child care program allows her to go to work, while providing a valuable education for her 4-year-old son, Ernesto.
"I have him here mainly to learn English. I don't speak English to him at home. I don't want him to forget his mother language. I want him to be bilingual," Corral said. "When he comes home, he tells me his colors in English and I tell him what they are in Spanish."
For the full-day program, parents must have a job or be seeking employment. They also must meet state income qualification, which are based on the household size. For the half-day program, parents only need to meet the income guidelines, Eslava said.

Early learning centers
Family Service Association operates 13 child-development centers in Riverside County.

Cabazon
Cabazon Child Development Center, 14580 S. Broadway St., 951-849-7535

Hemet Child Development Center, 41931 E. Florida Ave., 951-925-2160

West Hemet Child Development Center, 790 W. Acacia Ave., 951-925-2160

Mead Valley
Mead Valley Child Development Center, 21091 Rider St., 951-657-2889

Moreno Valley
Alessandro Child Development Center, 23750 Alessandro Blvd., Suite G101, 951-653-6100
Hemlock Child Development Center, 23270 Hemlock Ave., 951-786-3985
Moreno Valley Child Development Center, 21250 Box Springs Road, 951-786-3985

Riverside

Alvord Child Development Center, 8230 Wells Ave., 951-637-5587

Arlanza Child Development Center, 7940 Philbin Ave., 951-352-2810

Highgrove Child Development Center, 459 Center St., 951-369-0979

La Sierra Child Development Center, 4601 Pierce St., 951-343-0979

Magnolia Child Development Center, 8172 Magnolia Ave., 951- 687-9922

Rubidoux Child Development Center, 5765 42nd St., 951-274-7940

Friday, September 25, 2009

Outside Agencies that Can Help

Emergency
help for parents and teens. Each agency listed here should have a viable web page of services at free or reduced rates. Certainly they will give you a good place to start. Please right click your mouse on the title of the agency.                                 
                                                                                            





Depart. of Health Services - Free Health Care for children.

Child Protective Services (CPS)

C.H.A.D.D. An organization for parents of children suffering with one of the three types of A.D.D

Free and reduced school meal program - All parents should apply!

Food Stamps

W.I.C

Free Health Care for Your Children

S.A.R.A - Teen suicide prevention ORGANZATION

Foster Youth Guide book - RIGHTS AND AIDE FOR FOSTER KIDS

Medi-Cal - MEDICAL INSURANCE

Homeless shelters -THOSE THAT REMAIN AFTER THE CUTS

Family Care Centers: Dept. of Public Health

Rape Crisis Center - RIVERSIDE & CONFIDEDENTIAL

Loma Linda Medical Center - LOW COST MEDICAL

Operation School Bell- IF FUNDED, A PLACE WHERE CHILDREN CAN GET CLOTHES FOR SCHOOL

Youth Crisis Hotline - YOUNG PEOPLE TALKING TO OTHER YOUTH IN CRISIS


Outside Agencies that Can Help

Emergency
help for parents and teens. Each agency listed here should have a viable web page of services at free or reduced rates. Certainly they will give you a good place to start. Please right click your mouse on the title of the agency.                                 
                                                                                            





Depart. of Health Services - Free Health Care for children.

Child Protective Services (CPS)

C.H.A.D.D. An organization for parents of children suffering with one of the three types of A.D.D

Free and reduced school meal program - All parents should apply!

Food Stamps

W.I.C

Free Health Care for Your Children

S.A.R.A - Teen suicide prevention ORGANZATION

Foster Youth Guide book - RIGHTS AND AIDE FOR FOSTER KIDS

Medi-Cal - MEDICAL INSURANCE

Homeless shelters -THOSE THAT REMAIN AFTER THE CUTS

Family Care Centers: Dept. of Public Health

Rape Crisis Center - RIVERSIDE & CONFIDEDENTIAL

Loma Linda Medical Center - LOW COST MEDICAL

Operation School Bell- IF FUNDED, A PLACE WHERE CHILDREN CAN GET CLOTHES FOR SCHOOL

Youth Crisis Hotline - YOUNG PEOPLE TALKING TO OTHER YOUTH IN CRISIS


Friday, September 18, 2009

Census numbers show Inland poverty, food-stamp use on the rise

10:00 PM PDT on Tuesday, September 29, 2009

By DAVID OLSON
The Press-Enterprise

New Census figures on poverty are another grim reminder of the toll the severe recession is taking on Inland lives.

Nearly 21 percent of San Bernardino County's children lived in poverty in 2008, up from just over 16 percent in 2007, according to the Census estimates released Tuesday. The child-poverty rate in Riverside County was 17 percent. Food-stamp enrollment was up 48 percent in Riverside County and 30 percent in San Bernardino County.

Rick Wells is not reflected in those 2008 statistics, which were computed when the Inland area's unemployment rate was still rising. Wells, 20, lost his $15-an-hour construction job in March 2008 but was able to piece together enough work to avoid government assistance -- until Tuesday, when he sat in a crammed state Department of Public Social Services office in Moreno Valley clutching his food-stamp application. It's kind of embarrassing to ask the government for help when I know I'm very capable of working," Wells said. Like countless other Inland residents, Wells has applied for job after job but he says there's nothing. Wells has been homeless for two weeks, after he lost a live-in job helping a woman with household tasks. Her husband returned home from the hospital to assist her. Sometimes Wells sleeps behind a Moreno Valley liquor store. Other times he sleeps on a park bench. He wants to join the Marines.

"It's a place to sleep and get money and food," Wells said.

He knows he might get sent to Iraq or Afghanistan. But it's better than being homeless and jobless. "You can die on the street," Wells said. Wells was waiting with dozens of others. They filled the room's blue plastic chairs and lined much of the wall space.

Javier Gutiérrez, 66, lost his $8.50-an-hour security-guard job in February 2008. The Moreno Valley man was applying Tuesday to renew his food-stamp benefits. Olivia Muñoz makes $8.50 an hour at a bowling-alley snack bar, but she can't get more than 20 hours a week of work. With her $500-a-month rent for a room in a Moreno Valley apartment, it's not enough to buy food. She was in line in front of Gutiérrez, waiting to pick up a food-stamp card she had been approved for.
Muñoz, 24, studied for three years at a Los Angeles vocational school to become a dental-laboratory technician. But she can't find a lab job. She is still paying off $6,000 in school loans.

Last year, 4.3 percent of Riverside County residents and 7 percent of San Bernardino County residents relied on food stamps, according to the estimates from the Census' American Community Survey, which queries 3million people each year. More recent county figures are unavailable (But likely to be much higher).

Statewide, 23 percent more people received food stamps in June 2009 than in June 2008, according to preliminary data from the federal Department of Agriculture, which administers the food-stamp program. The average recipient nationwide gets $133 in monthly food assistance.

That money sometimes runs out before the end of the month, said Beverly Earl, San Bernardino County director for family and community services for Catholic Charities San Bernardino/Riverside. So they come to the organization's food pantries. They ask for toilet paper, deodorant, soap and other nonfood items not covered by food stamps, Earl said.

Census numbers show Inland poverty, food-stamp use on the rise

10:00 PM PDT on Tuesday, September 29, 2009

By DAVID OLSON
The Press-Enterprise

New Census figures on poverty are another grim reminder of the toll the severe recession is taking on Inland lives.

Nearly 21 percent of San Bernardino County's children lived in poverty in 2008, up from just over 16 percent in 2007, according to the Census estimates released Tuesday. The child-poverty rate in Riverside County was 17 percent. Food-stamp enrollment was up 48 percent in Riverside County and 30 percent in San Bernardino County.

Rick Wells is not reflected in those 2008 statistics, which were computed when the Inland area's unemployment rate was still rising. Wells, 20, lost his $15-an-hour construction job in March 2008 but was able to piece together enough work to avoid government assistance -- until Tuesday, when he sat in a crammed state Department of Public Social Services office in Moreno Valley clutching his food-stamp application. It's kind of embarrassing to ask the government for help when I know I'm very capable of working," Wells said. Like countless other Inland residents, Wells has applied for job after job but he says there's nothing. Wells has been homeless for two weeks, after he lost a live-in job helping a woman with household tasks. Her husband returned home from the hospital to assist her. Sometimes Wells sleeps behind a Moreno Valley liquor store. Other times he sleeps on a park bench. He wants to join the Marines.

"It's a place to sleep and get money and food," Wells said.

He knows he might get sent to Iraq or Afghanistan. But it's better than being homeless and jobless. "You can die on the street," Wells said. Wells was waiting with dozens of others. They filled the room's blue plastic chairs and lined much of the wall space.

Javier Gutiérrez, 66, lost his $8.50-an-hour security-guard job in February 2008. The Moreno Valley man was applying Tuesday to renew his food-stamp benefits. Olivia Muñoz makes $8.50 an hour at a bowling-alley snack bar, but she can't get more than 20 hours a week of work. With her $500-a-month rent for a room in a Moreno Valley apartment, it's not enough to buy food. She was in line in front of Gutiérrez, waiting to pick up a food-stamp card she had been approved for.
Muñoz, 24, studied for three years at a Los Angeles vocational school to become a dental-laboratory technician. But she can't find a lab job. She is still paying off $6,000 in school loans.

Last year, 4.3 percent of Riverside County residents and 7 percent of San Bernardino County residents relied on food stamps, according to the estimates from the Census' American Community Survey, which queries 3million people each year. More recent county figures are unavailable (But likely to be much higher).

Statewide, 23 percent more people received food stamps in June 2009 than in June 2008, according to preliminary data from the federal Department of Agriculture, which administers the food-stamp program. The average recipient nationwide gets $133 in monthly food assistance.

That money sometimes runs out before the end of the month, said Beverly Earl, San Bernardino County director for family and community services for Catholic Charities San Bernardino/Riverside. So they come to the organization's food pantries. They ask for toilet paper, deodorant, soap and other nonfood items not covered by food stamps, Earl said.

Tuesday, July 14, 2009

Tomorrow - interesting reading




My Favorite Links:


 (office of civil rights - Education)





Tomorrow - interesting reading




My Favorite Links:


 (office of civil rights - Education)