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#childcare

3 posts3 participants0 posts today

Trudeau announces $37B in child care deals with 11 provinces and territories
Prime Minister Justin Trudeau's government has signed agreements totalling almost $37 billion over five years with 11 provinces and territories to extend the federal child care space program, Radio-Canada has learned.
#politics #money #childcare #News
cbc.ca/news/politics/trudeau-a

“Rs have tried for years to cut$$ for these programs, have generally been unsuccessful. Head Start childcare funds are popular -may be a backdoor way of defunding: just fire all the people who process grant apps & cut the checks. At the very least, slows down$ getting out the door. PJ25 explicitly called for eliminating Head Start.”
-C Rampell

Defunding programs for young children, is an ongoing Republican battle, that primarily targets working women.

First Nations child welfare class action claims process opens in March: AFN
The agreement will recognize nine distinct groups of claimants, and will open to the first two groups on March 10. Foster parents are not entitled to compensation.
#lawsuit #childcare #agreement #Canada #AssemblyofFirstNations #FirstNationschildwelfare
globalnews.ca/news/11012810/fi

Some pointers from "The Eye of Every Storm - #Anarchist Response to Hurricane Helene"

#CrimethInc, 2024-11-13

"At the end of September 2024, western North Carolina and the surrounding states experienced 30 inches of rainfall over two days when an unnamed storm collided with Hurricane Helene over the mountains of Southern Appalachia. The resulting catastrophe laid waste to the entire region. At a time when #misinformation, rising #authoritarianism, and disasters exacerbated by industrially-produced climate change are creating a feedback loop of escalating crisis, it’s crucial to understand #DisasterResponse as an integral part of community defense and strategize about how this can play a part in movements for liberation. In the following reflection, a local anarchist involved in longstanding disaster response efforts in #Appalachia recounts the lessons that they have learned over the past six weeks and offers advice about how to prepare for the disasters to come.

"The National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration estimated that Hurricane Helene poured 40 trillion gallons of water on the region. This caused an estimated 1800 landslides; it damaged over 160 municipal water and sewer systems, at least 6000 miles of roads, more than 1000 bridges and culverts, and an estimated 126,000 homes. There have been over 230 confirmed deaths across six states with many still missing.

"The entire region was completely cut off from the outside world for a day or more, with all major roads shut down by landslides, collapsed bridges, and downed trees. Water, power, internet and cell service all went down within hours of the hurricane arriving, and remained down for days or, in some areas, weeks. There are still communities that will likely not have electricity for another three months because the roads that the power company would use no longer exist. Six weeks into this disaster, there are still tens of thousands of people who lack access to drinkable water. Not only have thousands of homes been wiped off the map—in many cases, the land they rested on no longer exists. Massive landslides have scoured canyons 30 feet deep, exposing bedrock that has not seen the light of day for tens of thousands of years. The torrential floods moved so much earth and caused so many rivers to change course that scientists have designated the hurricane a 'geological event.'

"In response, a beautiful web of mutual aid networks has emerged, saving countless lives by bringing in #EssentialSupplies, providing #MedicalCare, setting up neighborhood #WaterDistribution centers, #SolarChargingStations, #SatelliteInternetHubs, free #kitchens, free #childcare, and more. Name a need and there are folks out here who have self-organized to meet it. We share these lessons we have learned in hopes of helping others to prepare for similar situations, aiming to increase our capacity to build autonomous infrastructure for the long haul.

Start Preparing Now

"There is no time like the present to get organized.

"Our mutual aid group has been around for almost eight years. Within 72 hours of the floodwaters receding, we had a functioning mutual aid hub and were mobilizing folks to check on missing people and #ChainsawCrews to cut people out of their homes and open up roads. We were only able to do these things because we had already put in the work in our community to build the trust and relationships that are so vital in times of crisis.

"While we are a small group, we have an extensive network of friends and allies that has grown throughout years of smaller-scale mutual aid and organizing efforts. The best way to prepare for a disaster is not to stockpile supplies, but to build trust in your community and nurture a healthy web of relationships. The best way to accomplish this is to start doing mutual aid projects in your community before an acute crisis arises. This will give you practice operating as a group and organizing logistics, and it will also connect you with others you wouldn’t otherwise meet and show them that they can count on you. Because of the work we had already put in, when the crisis hit, people turned to us and spread the word that we are a good group to funnel supplies and money through. You can only build that kind of reputation by putting in the work now.

Communications

"One of the biggest initial challenges we faced was that most means of communication went offline for between 24 hours and several weeks, depending on where you lived. That includes #landlines, #CellPhones, and internet. We can’t stress enough the importance of having multiple back-up options in place to be ready for a situation like this. First of all, make sure you have a place and time established in advance where folks know they can find each other in the event of a disaster. This is probably a good idea even if communications don’t go offline—nothing beats face-to-face communication.

"Satellite internet was invaluable during the first couple of weeks. For some particularly hard-hit communities, it remains the only means of communication six weeks into this disaster. Unfortunately, #Starlink, which is owned by the white supremacist Elon Musk, has proven to be the most useful and the easiest to set up in a disaster scenario. We know from past experience that he is eager to suppress social movements that use his companies’ services. There are other companies that provide satellite internet, but it tends to be slower, with significant data limits. These are generally not mobile systems and would be challenging to set up in the middle of a disaster.

"Don’t forget that you will need a source of electricity such as a generator or solar power to make satellite internet work.

"Radios, especially ham radios, are another important means of communication that should be arranged in advance with people who already know how to use them. Our mountainous terrain limits the distance that radios can broadcast, but it would still have been helpful if we had possessed ham radios.

Getting Organized

"Grassroots disaster relief is no longer the exclusive province of church groups and small bands of autonomous mutual aid groups. The notion has gone mainstream since the beginning of the COVID-19 pandemic, when so many people discovered that their neighbors were all they had to count on. At this point, well-organized and well-resourced groups of every stripe are prepared to mobilize quickly—from reactionary right-leaning groups like the Cajun Navy and to networks of volunteer helicopter pilots, not to mention radical groups like Mutual Aid Disaster Relief. Beyond these specific groups, more people understand how to self-organize now. Within three to five days of the flood waters receding, you couldn’t drive more than ten minutes without running into a #DIY #ReliefHub or water station in someone’s front yard, church, or gas station parking lot. It would not be an overstatement to say that within a week, western North Carolina had the highest concentration of four-wheelers, all-terrain vehicles, and dirt bikes in the world, as people poured in from all over the South and beyond to help with search and rescue and to get supplies out to cut-off communities.

"Most of these hubs were truly #grassroots, with no formal organization behind them. This is an overwhelmingly positive development, but it does not come without challenges. The chief problems were redundancy of effort and lack of coordination between relief hubs, road clearing crews, and people doing #SupplyRuns, search and rescue, and wellness checks. The sooner you can develop relationships and good communication systems with other hubs, the better, so you won’t have to be constantly reinventing the wheel.

"Creating an intake system for incoming volunteers and arranging for people to coordinate them is a huge piece of the puzzle. We had to turn away many offers of help in the first few weeks because we didn’t have a good system in place for fielding newcomers, especially those from out of town, nor could we guarantee that we could plug them into a project on any given day if they just showed up, despite the fact that there was always a mountain of work to do. Connecting volunteers to communities and individual homes that need medical care, mucking, gutting, and repairs requires an enormous amount of legwork on your part, not to mention building trust between you and the residents. You would do well to have someone in your group that has a deep love of spreadsheets."

Full article:
crimethinc.com/2024/11/13/afte
#MutualAid #ClimateChange #Preparedness #BuildingCommunity #CommunityPreparedness #CommunityDefense #Polycrisis #HamRadios

CrimethInc.The Eye of Every StormAn Appalachian anarchist involved in responding to Hurricane Helene discusses what they have learned and how to prepare for the disasters to come.

"The occupations that are most relevant to freedom are the caregivers: elementary school teachers, preschool teachers, childcare workers. A society concerned with freedom would respect such people and pay them well.

...

Children borrow from adults a special kind of time: they can repay the loan only much later when they are adults, by giving time to someone of the next generation."

#Earlychildhoodeducation rant ahead.

Early Childhood Education (aka #childcare or #daycare - the latter is the least preferred label) is in turmoil right now. Everyone loved us during the pandemic shutdown since we kept corporate America going, but the last few years have been pretty horrible. Staffing is nearly impossible due to salaries - families cannot afford to pay what it costs for quality child care, essentially, and so our salaries are among the lowest. These are the people caring for our babies, and they frequently make minimum wage. So turnover is horrible, with people job skipping. I don’t hire those people, and I pay better than most, but it takes me ages to fill a spot. So I hire extra staff to ensure we make our better-than-state-mandated ratios.

So this month our liability insurance expires. Our insurance company (one of the largest providers of child care center insurance in the country) has decided to get out of the child care insurance business because people keep suing us when their children have accidents. I worked with our brokerage firm for weeks to find a new carrier. I lost count of how many turned us down and are similarly getting out of the child care insuring business. We finally found two who, between them, will fulfill the requirements needed. It is costing us $30,000 MORE per year than it did last year. Now, we are a large center, nonprofit, with families that can afford tuition. This will not drive us out of business, though it throws our budget into turmoil and we will have to find ways to make other cuts (we will do our best to not let it affect out employees’ wages).

America can’t work if we don’t work.

I’ve been doing this for 36 years. I’ll be retiring soon. This is the worst it’s ever been. I don’t expect the next 4 years to go any better for us.

I cannot imagine how smaller centers who depend on state or federal grants and subsidies will survive. And if we don’t survive, how will people get to work? This is part of the plot, I’m realizing, to decimate the working poor.

Kids in daycare are more sedentary than you'd think. These educators aim to get preschoolers moving
You'd think preschoolers at daycare dash around all day. But they're more sedentary than you'd expect — which can impact their development of movement and other skills. An expanding initiative aims to help ECEs get little kids moving more.
#health #childcare #activity #News #Canada
cbc.ca/news/canada/sedentary-p

Free childcare at DDD Melbourne 2025!

Did you know? Kids who are at tech conferences with their parents are:

🍎And 4% more likely to request that their homework be rescoped to 'better align with stakeholder expectations'. (May or may not be true.)

On second thought, book your kids into our onsite childcare facility while you enjoy DDD Melbourne on 22 Feb 2025. They'll be in safe hands!
ti.to/ddd-melbourne/ddd-2025-c