This article was originally published in the May 12, 1999 edition of the Los Angeles Times
© 1999 Los Angeles Times


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County to Launch Major Child Care Effort in Schools
By NICHOLAS RICCARDI, Times Staff Writer
Supervisors on Tuesday allocated $74 million to create the nation's
largest after-school child care system.
The after-class program will be held at 225 Los Angeles County
elementary schools with large numbers of children on public assistance.
It will be funded with surplus welfare money, but will be open at no cost
to all public school students.
Officials estimate that as many as 16,000 children will enroll in the
program, which will begin operating this summer, fully rolling out across
campuses through next year. Supervisors hope ultimately to increase the
system's funding to $120 million as well as to expand access to older
children, creating what educators call a "revolutionary" child care
system focusing on learning.
In fact, some high school students who would otherwise have idle time
on their hands may work in the new child care program watching
youngsters, educators said.
"It should really make life easier for so many people," said Lynn
Bayer, director of the county's welfare department. "The reality is that
many of these children don't receive child care and go home to empty
houses."
Called an after-school enrichment program, the system will operate
through the Los Angeles Unified School District and 34 other districts
across the county.
The program, the details of which now will be sketched in by school
districts, follows a year of lobbying by community groups alarmed at a
contradiction in welfare reform: Aid recipients have five years to find a
job, but Los Angeles lags far behind other urban areas in affordable
child care programs where parents can leave their children while working.
Unworkable Situations
The problem is particularly acute in working-class neighborhoods,
where more than 42,000 low-income parents are on waiting lists for child
care and others, like Paulette Payne, don't even bother applying.
The 35-year-old mother of seven is in a volunteer program, which she
hopes will lead to a job-training slot. However, she must peel off
throughout the day to pick up her children from grade school and ferry
them to her sister's. If she enrolled them in existing child care
programs, it would sap most of her $829 monthly welfare grant.
"It sets me back on time, and I'm on a time clock," said Payne,
referring to welfare reform's five-year limit on aid.
Supervisors said expanding child care was key to achieving real
welfare reform in the county.
"If welfare reform is to succeed," Supervisor Don Knabe said, "quality
affordable child care must be made available so that parents entering the
working world will be comfortable knowing that their children are in safe
hands."
In Sacramento, meanwhile, Gov. Gray Davis is proposing to spend an
additional $35 million statewide for after-school programs in elementary
and middle schools. The $35 million would be added to the $50 million the
state already spends on such programs.
The money, expected to be included as part of the 1999-2000 budget,
would be used to open after-school programs at 250 middle schools and 133
elementary schools, an administration official said Tuesday.
Davis, who is in the process of deciding how to spend a state surplus
estimated at $4 billion, also is calling for another $23 million for
preschool programs for 3- and 4-year-old children of low-income parents.
The money would be added to the $181 million already earmarked for
preschool programs, and provide space for 17,000 children in the next
fiscal year.
Observers say the push for networks of child care with a strong
educational component is a new phenomenon.
"Historically, it's been these archipelagoes of school-based
programs," said Bruce Fuller of Policy Analysis for California Education,
based at UC Berkeley and Stanford. Those programs, he said, have usually
been in affluent neighborhoods and funded by parents.
The welfare money allocated by the supervisors will pay for
non-welfare students only during the first six months of the program.
Afterward, Los Angeles Unified will pay for its non-welfare students.
County officials said they hope other school districts in the county will
do the same.
"This is one example of how meeting the needs of mothers who have the
least also benefits others," said Margaret Prescod of the Every Mother is
a Working Mother Network, which pushed the Los Angeles program.
And although the money approved by supervisors Tuesday would pay for
after-school programs for only elementary schoolchildren, county
officials are moving toward creating similar programs in junior high
schools and high schools.
Quality Time
More significant, the new after-school programs will focus on
education rather than solely on recreation, helping with homework and
preparation for the standardized Stanford 9 test, as well as providing
computers for children who rarely have access to them at home.
Studies have shown that such classes can significantly boost
educational achievement, and officials said they hope to see an impact
from the after-school program.
"Our superintendent is interested in raising achievement and test
scores and this is a huge part of that," said John Berndt of the Los
Angeles County Office of Education. "It's a different approach to how we
look at education so we can get people excited about math, excited about
reading."
L.A. Unified and other districts currently have districtwide
after-school programs, but because of low funding they are solely
recreational, officials said. Those networks will stay in place but be
bolstered by the new program.
"This is a real paradigm shift in terms of after-school programs,"
said Phil Kauble, also of the county education office.
The use of welfare money in the schools follows a trend in Los Angeles
of traditional social services shifting into the school system, as the
educational system takes on more responsibility for children. Already the
county is seeking federal health money to pay for health care in
school-based clinics and is expanding its mental health services into
schools.
"It's an important step in redefining public education, in redefining
what public schools will be about in the future," said Prescod, the
activist with the Every Mother group.
As dramatic and expensive as the county's action is--in dollars, it
amounts to more than federal and state subsidies for local child care
combined, officials said--it may only make a dent in Los Angeles County's
problem.
A study by Policy Analysis for California Education found that Los
Angeles would need a whopping 1,517 more child care facilities before it
would have access comparable to other urban areas. Another study by
advocates for the poor found that of 81,000 Los Angeles families that
signed up for welfare last year, fewer than 12,000 found child care.
Still, Prescod and a coterie of single mothers and activists gave the
Board of Supervisors a standing ovation after they approved funding for
the program.
"This is one of the best gifts that mothers throughout the city and
the county can get for Mother's Day," Prescod said. "It's more
substantial than the flowers we get--though we like those, as well."
* * * Times staff writer Dan Morain contributed to this story.
* * *
Program at a Glance
The Board of Supervisors on Tuesday approved funding for a new
child-care system at schools, with slots for 16,000 children.
Where: At 225 public elementary schools countywide, still being
selected on the basis of number of students on welfare.
Who qualifies: Any student at a school with a program, regardless of
welfare status.
When: Schools are just beginning to design programs and hire staff.
The first of the programs are not scheduled to open until July, and most
would open next year.
For information: Call Bruce Aubry, program director for L.A. Unified
School District, at (818) 904-2164, or John Brendt at Los Angeles County
Office of Education, which coordinates with other school districts, at
(562) 922-6613.
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