Don’t Leave Me! Three Ways to Handle Baby’s Separation Anxiety
Long and teary goodbyes are hard on everyone. Here's how to keep them short and sweet.
Read the Article at WhatToExpect.com
Introducing a New Babysitter
"My 11-month-old loves day care, but we'd like to try a babysitter on some weekend evenings. What's the best way to introduce him to a new caregiver?"
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Choosing a Babysitter: Six Steps to Babysitter Bliss
Whether it's a night on the town or an afternoon errand, here's how to make your baby-less outings as easy as possible—for everyone!
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Novato Woman Travels to Nation’s Capitol to Advocate for Quality Child care
In March, Melinda McCall of Novato represented area parents at the
National Association of Child Care Resource and Referral
Agencies’ (NACCRRA) national policy symposium in Washington, D.C.
She learned about national child care issues and met with members of
Congress on Capitol Hill to advocate for more affordable, high-quality
child care for Novato parents.
McCall, the mother of children who are now 8, 10 and 14, faced
difficulties finding affordable, quality child care when her children were
young. As a teen mother, finding employment that enabled her to
provide for herself and her children was difficult.
Full text available at the Novato Advance.
Local Man Fights for Quality Child Care
Twinsburg — Since 1998, when his 5-month old daughter died from injuries she received at an unregulated family child care home, Twinsburg resident Lawrence Hall has worked to improve conditions and create accountability at child care facilities in Ohio.
Last month, he traveled to Washington, D.C., as part of the National Association of Child Care Resource and Referral Agencies, to urge lawmakers to continue providing funding for Ohio child care facilities.
“The Child Care Development Block Grant is funding that states already receive,” said Hall, who serves on the Board of Directors for the Ohio Child Care Resource and Referral Association. “Our goal was to urge representatives and senators to sponsor a bill re-authorizing this funding, but we also want to see language of the bill changed to require more inspections of professional child care facilities.”
Full text available at the Twinsburg Bulletin.
Parent Voices Heard on Capitol Hill
Today, over 11 million children under age 5 are in some type of child care arrangement every week while their parents work. On average, children of working mothers spend 36 hours every week in child care. Studies repeatedly have shown that high-quality child care – care that provides a loving, safe, stable and age-appropriate stimulating environment – helps children enter school ready to learn. Yet, less than 10 percent of the nation’s child care is of high-quality.
Unfortunately, not all of our policymakers know the facts about child care. Each year, members of the National Association of Child Care Resource & Referral Agencies (NACCRRA) come to Washington, D.C. to NACCRRA’s Public Policy Symposium. Representatives from state and local CCR&R agencies from throughout the nation join together to raise the visibility of child care issues, such as the lack of quality in child care, and to advocate for improved conditions. Last year, our members heard from Members of Congress that the need for high-quality child care was not a priority for them because they did not hear directly from parents on the issue. NACCRRA made it a priority to change that by bringing parents to the very next Symposium.
This year, NACCRRA introduced the Parents@Symposium program to ensure that policymakers heard directly from parents. Forty-four parents and grandparents from 39 states were chosen to attend the conference, which was held March 10-14. The Parents@Symposium program included a series of highly interactive sessions designed specifically to prepare parents to meet with their representatives in Congress and the media. The group included parents who shared tragic stories about their children who were hurt or killed in unlicensed child care settings; parents who encountered difficulties finding and paying for child care; and parents who shared contrasting stories about the high-quality settings they experienced in the military child care system. Six family members of children who tragically died in child care came to advocate for standards that will increase safety, training and inspections.
After the parents and grandparents learned about national child care issues, they had the opportunity to meet with their representatives on Capitol Hill. The feedback from the parents and grandparents after their visits was overwhelmingly positive. One grandparent shared that she had no idea how much power she had as one American citizen to make positive changes for children. (Read more about their stories in, “Child Care in America: Parents’ Perspectives” )
This inaugural year for our Parents@Symposium program was inspirational and successful. The CCR&R professionals and staff members who attended Symposium were extremely impressed by the parents’ courage and ability to articulate the issues. In fact, Linda Smith, NACCRRA’s Executive Director, said that the parents were “the highlight of the Symposium. Thanks to these parents’ willingness to share their personal experiences, the CCR&R members of NACCRRA achieved their goal of educating legislators about the realities of child care in America through the power of parents’ testimonials.” We also heard from more than one CCR&R member who said, “This year, the parents helped us make a real difference on Capitol Hill.”
We hope that Symposium marked the beginning of a journey of parent advocacy for the parents who attended, and that the experience inspired them to use the experience as a springboard for future advocacy activity. We are thilled to announce that many of the parents who attended our 2009 Parents@Symposium program will form the first cadre of Parent Leaders in Child Care Aware® Parent Network and will be offered continued leadership training.
May 8, 2009 is the 13th Annual Provider Appreciation Day! How Will You Celebrate!?
Provider Appreciation Day was founded to recognize child care providers, teachers and other educators of young children everywhere. Momentum and support for this event has grown since 1996, when it began, and recognition has steadily grown to include individuals and government organizations throughout North America, Europe and Asia. It is truly an international effort!
This year’s Provider Appreciation Day is Friday, May 8 (always the Friday before Mother’s Day). It’s a day when individuals (mothers, fathers, grandparents, neighbors) and community leaders can network with child care and early care and education groups to plan events, schedule media coverage and issue proclamations. We ask you to begin now to contact parents, community groups, child care agencies, government leaders and others so that anyone who wants to support child care providers and educators of young children will have the opportunity to participate in the important recognition events in your community.
Where are the events in your community? They are the ones YOU organize and make happen. There are so many ways to recognize “providers”. The website, www.providerappreciation.org, lists a multitude of suggestions for events that can be hosted by both organizations and as individuals. The Web Site also has a link to view past and current events by state to give you resources and ideas when you are organizing events or other organizations in the state you may want to contact.
Some suggestions include:
Organizations
• Plan a luncheon or dinner honoring child care providers
• Hang banners or posters
• Ask government officials to sign a proclamation
• Purchase a new piece of equipment for a program in honor of the day
• Organize a spa day
• Send a press release to your local newspaper
• Invite neighboring early childhood organizations to join you in your celebration
Parents
• Send flowers, cards or a handwritten note of appreciation
• Bring breakfast or lunch for your provider and for the kids
• Work with your child to create a special remembrance
• Give your provider a paid day off, a raise or a bonus….or that special spa day
• Inquire if your employer provides scholarships for toys, equipment or training that you can sponsor as a parent
• Write an editorial to your local newspaper
Choose a way that will help you show providers and all educators that their efforts do not go unnoticed or unappreciated. This is also a perfect opportunity to keep the importance of child care and early education in the minds of the community and government officials as well.
To learn more about the ongoing initiatives of Provider Appreciation Day, visit the national Web site jointly sponsored by the National Association of Child Care Resource & Referral Agencies (NACCRRA) and the National Association for Family Child Care (NAFCC). The site has links to templates of sample press releases, government proclamations and news testimonials that you can adapt to send to your local newspaper, radio or other media outlet to let them know about Provider Appreciation Day and any special events you may have planned.
Please let us know at www.providerappreciation.org of any community or state events you become involved in so that they can be posted on the Web site. Help this be truly a community and national movement to recognize and give thanks and appreciation to the hundreds of thousands of child care providers who contribute to the most crucial years in a young child’s life.
Coming Home: Military Families Cope With Change
This primetime special, presented by Sesame Workshop and featuring Queen Latifah and John Mayer, tells the stories of service members returning home with injuries — both visible and invisible — and explores the heroic struggles their families face on the path to finding a “new normal.”
Tune in April 1 at 8pm on PBS.
Child Care Provider Charged With Abuse
A day care provider in Rugby is accused of striking, kicking or throwing six children in her care. Lori Ann Voeller says she knows she’s innocent, and refers other questions to her attorney. Voeller, 47, is scheduled for a preliminary hearing next Thursday on child abuse charges.
Full text available at KFYR-TV.
Pinellas Child Care Worker Charged in Death of 1-Year-Old
A day care worker was charged with murder in the death of a 1-year-old girl she was caring for in her home in August, the Pinellas County Sheriff’s Office said.
Deputies arrested Stephanie M. Spurgeon, 37, of 830 Edgehill Drive, Palm Harbor, at her home at 9:15 a.m. today on a charge of first-degree murder after a 2 1/2-month investigation.
Full text available at The Suncoast News.










