Tuesday, September 28, 2010

CHILD CARE PROGRAM WOES IN CALIFORNIAN STATE COUNTIES

Child care centers are facing a lot of financial trouble in Coachella Valley. The state government of California has discontinued paying of the seventy five percent expenses. In order to go ahead with running of the facility the child care centers are finding it very difficult.

So much so that Susie Dauto, who looks after the Storyland Preschool is already finding it next to impossible to deal with the financial crisis. It leads her to simply using her own finance and even involving her family to look after the child care center. For the first time in a span of last fourteen years there was no summer program. This is again true of a number of other low budget child care centers which are seeing themselves in a tight situation.

There is no dearth of moderate income families who may as well not be able to simply send their little ones to these child care facilities. The day care centers are asking for extra financial aid from the parents other then the state subsidized fee which they paid earlier. Many of whom have stopped sending their children to these institutions.

The FLIP project encourages local students to become involved in communal & charitable giving Gibraltar. Visit http://www.flip.gi for more information.

A number of these day care institutes have already shut down seeing about 600 kids in need of a day care shelter. More are on their way lest the government intervenes and revitalizes them with the financial support desperately needed. Same will be the fate of day care programs in Palm Springs Unified School District which will in turn see another 470 kids losing day care by November this year.

According to a survey report same is the case with about 40 percent of the child care facilities in Riverside County. Thus only the government may bail these all important child care units out of trouble lest they shut down one by one in only a matter of time. These all await for the legislature pass its budget to help them out.

We Care Project makes children aware of the significance of philanthropic giving to others. Visit www.wecaregib.com for more information.

Previous Post:Active Volunteer Nominated for ‘Volunteer Of the Year’ Award

Wednesday, June 2, 2010

Active Volunteer Nominated for ‘Volunteer Of the Year’ Award

Yvy Carter, 46 has been nominated for the Breast Cancer Campaign’s ‘Volunteer of the Year’ award. She has been working with the Waltham Forest foundation and has done exceptionally good work. She has actively supported her charity in raising funds and continuously working in spreading breast cancer awareness.

Carter spent a lot of her time volunteering for the breast cancer awareness campaign. She actively took part in designing and shaping up the campaign. Last year she assisted the charity staff in organizing events like pink aerobics and charity walks. She actively initiated the charity collections and also cheered the Campaign’s London Marathon runners.

FLIP successfully organized a corporate fundraising quiz night to raise funds for Happy Faces Charitable Trust aiming chronic illness support. Visit http://www.flip.gi for more information.

The hardworking volunteer is known to be happy all the time. Most of her time is dedicated to serving the needy people. She wants to spread awareness of breast cancer as she feels the deadly disease is attacking a lot of women and if detected in early stages it can be cured. For her no job is big or small she managed to ask people for donate money for breast cancer patients on the road and planning the campaign’s development with equal ease. She raised £179 in just hours at Harrods. This multi faceted woman is one of the fine examples of women power. With her skills she has motivated a lot of volunteers of the Waltham Forest foundation.

On being nominated she said “I’m delighted to have been nominated for Breast Cancer Campaign’s ‘Volunteer of the Year’ award. It is a charity I am proud to support to help raise awareness about breast cancer and help fund the life-changing research aimed at beating the disease.”

The organizers of the awards say they know charities put in a lot of effort in their activities and such good work should be recognized.