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contents of the on-line edition of The Nugget represent a selection
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Activists
try to salvage Head Start Local
community groups are scrambling to save the Head Start classroom that was
closed down in the face of budget cuts last month.
Tom Coffield, director of
SOAR (Sisters Organization for Activities and Recreation) offered classroom
space for the early childhood development program, charging only for utilities.
According to Head Start teacher
Jill Rowe, the Community Action Team of Sisters (CATS), Kiwanis, the Sisters
School District and Central Oregon Community Action Agency Network are
all looking for ways to keep the center open.
There are hurdles. Program
administrators still favor bussing the children to Redmond facilities,
Coffield said.
Coffield and other local community
leaders don't like that. They want to preserve a Sisters center.
"I have to convince them that
it's a good thing," Coffield said.
The major issue is enrollment.
There are currently five children enrolled; there must be at least 10
for the SOAR classroom possibility to have a chance of acceptance.
Teachers are actively recruiting
income-qualified families for the program.
There is also some question
whether the SOAR facility meets program requirements for on-site playground
equipment, but Coffield believes he can find a way to provide what is
needed.
Coffield considers Head Start
a natural fit with the pre-school programs SOAR currently offers. He said
having the two programs at the same site opens up opportunities for combined
activities that could benefit both programs.
The Head Start program provides
early childhood development services as well as pre-school education.
Head Start's family advocates visit each student's home twice a month
during the semester to assist families in meeting goals.
They direct families to free
medical check-ups, volun- teer opportunities, parenting classes, job skills
and health and nutrition services.
The program has always had
trouble maintaining itself in Sisters. While the families that are served
by the program really need it, there have never been enough income-qualified
families to fill a site with the desired 18 children.
The difference has been made
up with "over-income" children.
The COCAAN board of directors
and the Head Start Policy Council decided last month to close the Head
Start Center that was located at The Little Cloverdale Preschool in the
face of a $150,000 cut in state funding.
That closure does not affect
The Little Cloverdale Preschool operation.
If the Sisters center is to
survive at a new location, the program will have to have at least 10 qualified
children and have the other issues ironed out by mid-month, according
to Rowe.
For further information on
registering for the program, call Rowe at 549-0539 or Robin Thomas at
549-2140. |
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