Briefly in the news
The city appointed Children’s Needs Task Force of Huntington Beach is
striving to secure funding to build a center where parents can go to get
information on family counseling, health services, parenting techniques
and childhood education.
“People don’t know where to go,” said Cathy McGough, who serves on the
task force, and on the Huntington Beach City School District’s school
board. “[The center] would be good for families or parents who moved here
and want to know what activities are available.”
The task force received a $35,000 grant in September from The Children
and Families Commission of Orange County, which the task force hopes can
be used to hire a consultant to develop a business plan for the center.
The grant comes from the commission, which was created in 1998 to
handle the revenues generated by Proposition 10, which placed a
50-cent-per-pack tax on cigarettes and other tobacco products sold in
California.
Funds from the tax are required to be used to support health,
education and child care programs that promote healthy early childhood
development from the prenatal stage to age 5.
Before the task force can hire a consultant to help make its plan a
reality, it needs the approval of the commission to use the grant money
for that purpose, said Lane Macy a consultant for the commission.
“But I’m almost sure it’s going to go through, the funds have already
been allocated,” Macy said.
The commission must review and vote on the task force’s work plan, how
the money will be used and the grant agreement at its meeting Dec. 5.
Once on board a consultant will be charged with writing a business
plan for the center, determining an appropriate location and helping
secure ongoing funding, McGough said.
In that business plan will be a property grant application to the
commission, for the money required to run the center.
The task force expects the grant application will be for $350,000,
said task force chairwoman Shirley Carey.
“We’re going to apply for the maximum but don’t expect to have as high
a cost,” McGough said. “We’re not envisioning the center to be huge, more
to deploy people to where services are offered,” McGough said.
But McGough hopes some services could be provided at the center such
as parenting classes for newly married couples and initial counseling.
“Our mission is not tap the city’s general reserves, but have the
center funded from outside sources,” McGough said.
Establishing family resource centers is one of the ways the commission
hopes to meet it’s goal that children are healthy and ready to learn when
they enter school.
“It’s a tremendous opportunity to focus on children from the get go to
get ready for school and be productive individuals the rest of their
lives,” said Director of Programs and Evaluations for the Commission
Alyce Mastrianni. “The key is to start doing screening and provide
resources early on to develop and assess what needs the child has.”
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