Posts Tagged ‘daycare’

Early Childhood Programs: Bringing Balance to Work-life and Building Stronger Communities

Friday, February 12th, 2010
Center for Families & Children/Ease@Work
Center for Families & Children/Ease@Work – Photo by Patrick Gaul


The world is starting to figure out that early childhood education is very important. Ask any employee with children.  One of their biggest challenges is to balance work and parenthood. A good daycare arrangement will put the parent at ease when in the role of an employee and will set the child on a course to becoming a well-educated adult. While Ease@Work helps businesses to address this issue in the workplace, our parent company the Center for Families and Children (CFC) is addressing this issue on a societal level.

Before Ease@Work existed, there was the EASE Program – Employee Assistance SErvices and the Corporate Childcare Resource and Referral Program (CCR&R). Both were natural outgrowths of the two largest community-based programs of CFC: Behavioral Health programs and CFC Children’s Programs, which operate Cleveland-based high quality daycare centers. As EASE and CCR&R evolved to meet the changing needs of Ohio businesses, they were merged to create what is now known as Ease@Work. 

CFC’s Children’s Programs can trace their history back to the 1800’s when the Cleveland Day Nursery Association was one of the first agencies in this region to provide childcare. With over a century of experience in offering early childhood programs, CFC is one of the region’s experts on early learning.

Comments by CFC’s President and CEO, Sharon Sobol Jordan, were recently featured in the op-ed section of the Cleveland Plain Dealer. Jordan’s comments were part of a series of statements regarding the Jan. 17, 2010 PD article, “Change how kids learn – change the future,” about early childhood programs and how important they are to a child’s success – and ultimately, the success of the greater community.

 “High-quality learning programs focus on helping young children navigate their growing worlds, preparing them for a lifetime of learning,” Jordan said. “Children who are involved in early learning programs – via pre- and post-natal home visits and later in community early learning centers – are better poised for success in school and in life.”

Along with Jordan, Georgianna T. Roberts, president of the Board of Directors of the Hanna Perkins Center for Child Development, and Thea Wilson, executive director of the Office of Early Childhood Education, Cleveland Metropolitan School District, concur that early “intervention” is key to a child’s success. Education for parents/guardians, early assessment of behavioral or mental health issues, early learning programs and pre-kindergarten classes focusing on both the cognitive and socieo-emotional growth of a child all contribute to the success a child will experience in school and beyond.

To think programs such as these impact children only in terms of their school success would be short-sighted.  “Championing the investment in our youngest children is ‘the most effective way to reverse this community’s decline,’” Roberts said.

Providing parents/guardians with the education and tools to better care for their children is essential. Providing access to high quality daycare programming is the next step in laying the foundation for a child’s success in life, and ultimately, as a contributing member of the community.

 “The Center for Families and Children has five early learning centers in Cleveland and Cleveland Heights that have been recognized for their high quality and are nationally accredited, and we have been part of the community for more than 100 years,” said Jordan.

Ease@Work is proud to be a division of CFC, an organization that works hard in ”making success possible for people who choose to change their lives.”

Those in the community come to CFC because of a choice they’ve made – they want a better life for themselves, for their children, for their families, for their future. For some in our community, it’s easy to get off track – perhaps due to issues that walk hand-in-hand with living in poverty-stricken neighborhoods, or because of a mental illness, substance abuse problem or other life event. But if one of these people in our community wants to change their life, CFC is there to help by providing Early Learning Centers, Homebound Services, Youth Development Programs, Behavioral Health Services, Families and Fathers Together, Re-Entry Services and Family to Family programs. 

Ease@Work’s goal is similiar to that of CFC in that we foster ”better personal lives, for better work lives.” Much like CFC, Ease@Work is there for both the employees of our client companies and their management teams when they need us. As an EAP, employees come to us voluntarily when they need help with certain aspects of their lives. Jordan’s comments provide insight as to why Ease@Work is unique in our ability to provide assistance to employees with childcare issues. We do much more than tell employees where the nearest daycare center is located. Our childcare specialists draw from decades of expertise and provide valuable education, coaching and resources for employees struggling with the many issues associated with caring for children from birth through high school.

We think our success as a comprehensive EAP is doubly sweet. In providing EAP services to our contracted companies, we not only provide a valuable service to our clients, but Ease@Work in turn generates funds which are then returned to our non-profit parent company, CFC. These funds help provide the programs and services CFC offers to those who are in need of assistance…improving the quality of individual lives and our community as a whole.

Babysitting Your Neighbors’ Kids…And Not Breaking Any Laws

Monday, October 5th, 2009
Most would agree that helpful neighbors a sense of community is important, especially when raising children. Who would think a mom helping another family in the community would get in trouble for her neighborly deed?

Most would agree that helpful neighbors and a sense of community is important, especially when raising children. Who would think a mom helping another family in the community would get in trouble for her neighborly deed?

Caring for a Neighborhood Children

By Valerie S. Nosek

Okay. So yours is the house all the kids in the neighborhood flock to. You have a great relationship with the other parents on your block and welcome their kids into your home. As parents in the neighborhood, the group has taken the attitude of “it takes a village” to monitor and care for the children of the neighborhood.

When another parent needs a helping hand, you step in and offer to let their kids come over to your home. In turn, when you and your husband need a night out, that neighboring parent will care for your child. No money is exchanged. It’s just one neighbor doing a favor for another.

And that’s the way it’s supposed to be…isn’t it?

Not according to a recent article on Yahoo News. Recently, one mom living in a Grand Rapids, Michigan suburb was warned by the Michigan Department of Human Services to cease and desist from caring for neighborhood kids. The article, State to mom: Stop baby-sitting neighbors’ kids, hit the news this week and has caused an uproar among parents in both the state of Michigan and other states.

The story is this: the bus stop is right at the end of this family’s driveway. So, this mom decided to do a favor for the other working parents in the neighborhood and allowed their kids (three neighbor children) to come to her home for about an hour before the bus arrived. This mom would then make sure all the kids got on the bus and off to school. Neighborly deed done.

But not so fast. After receiving a complaint from another neighbor, the Department of Human Services sent a letter to the mom citing state regulations that prohibit a person from caring for unrelated children in their home for more than four weeks each calendar year unless they are a licensed day-care provider.

So, do parents everywhere have to now fear trouble with the state if they do a favor for a neighbor and help out watching their child for a total of more than the equivalent of four weeks out of the year? (If you’re talking business days, that only 16 days out of 365 that you’re allowed to perform a helpful childcare-related act.)

According to Ease@Work childcare specialists, the answer is “no.” You don’t have to worry about a letter from Ohio officials with the Department of Human Services arriving in your mail.

“Ohio’s laws are not as stringent as Michigan’s, so we have homes that could do just what this mom was doing and under Ohio’s law, be exempt and within their rights to offer this type of service,” said Janet Schiavoni, Ease@Work Account Manager and expert in dependent care services.

“For many parents, what this mom was doing is often a perfect solution to resolving work-life balance issues,” said Linda Hazen, a childcare specialist with Ease. “In fact, I often suggest that parents look to other trusted parents in the neighborhood to help out with simple childcare needs.” 

Hazen presented the same example of when one parent has to arrive at work earlier than another in the neighborhood. “It makes sense to reach out to available resources, such as an available neighbor, who is willing to make sure your child gets on the bus along with their child or children,” she said. This is often a no-cost solution when parents form cooperative relationships with others who have similar childcare needs.

The only time individuals need to be concerned about state childcare regulations is if you are actually operating as a licensed Type A day care home. But, if you are operating as a Type B home, you would be exempt from the law.

Ohio Day Care Licensing law defines Type B homes as homes that care for up to six children, of which no more than three are under the age of two, and if any of the childcare provider’s own children are under six years old they must be included in the total count,” Hazen said. If this mom were to be living in Ohio, she would be considered exempt from the law because she was only caring for three unrelated children and one of her own.

As an employee assistance program, Ease@Work offers expert advice on childcare and other dependent care services to client companies and their employees.