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UCLA's Early Care & Education child services program faces budget constraints

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Author: 
Torrey, Marcus
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Article
Publication Date: 
26 May 2010
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EXCERPTS

Gov. Arnold Schwarzenegger's May revised state budget proposal bodes
well for public higher education systems, but there is one department at
UCLA that has a lot to lose should the proposal pass.

UCLA's Early Care & Education program is a service that
provides UCLA students, faculty and staff with full-time, year-round
child care. It is also partially subsidized by state child care funds.

However, the funding from the state is currently in contention,
according to Gay Macdonald, the executive director of Early Care &
Education. A combined $2.3 billion would be cut from CalWORKS, which
provides financial assistance for low-income families, as well as from
the state's General Fund contributions to child care.

If Early Care & Education loses this money, and the program
is not able to find funding from another source, Macdonald said it is
likely that they will not be able to provide child care for infants or
toddlers of students. This is due to the fact that younger children are
more expensive to look after, Macdonald said.

The discontinuation of infant and toddler services could have a
big impact on students who currently utilize the Early Care &
Education services, she added.

"If they no longer have day care, I'm not sure what's going to
happen," said Sharmaine Lopez, a second-year sociology student who has a
17-month-old baby enrolled with Early Care & Education. "No one
else can take care of him while I am at school, and it would be very
difficult for me to take care of him."

During school days, the centers operated by Early Care &
Education staffers are open for ten hours, which allows students to
attend school for a full day. This contrasts with the state preschool
program, which might only provide a half-day of service, Macdonald said.
A plan like that would not serve families well, she added.

For someone like Lopez, who works 10 hours a week at the Bruin
Resource Center and interns eight hours a week at a different daycare
for her applied developmental psychology minor, a half-day of day care
would not be all that helpful.

Lopez said if worse comes to worst, she might have to take a
quarter off to figure out what she will do with her child.

"Cutting into the education system and really dismantling the
child care system in California, which has been a good national example,
seems like it is short-sighted and maybe a little too desperate,"
Macdonald said.

She added that these proposed cuts seem to be part of a trend
among California lawmakers to take finances away from welfare and
education, rather than raise taxes.
...
-reprinted from the Daily Bruin

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