History
| Author: | me@b... | |||
| Posted: | 6/9/2000; 11:34:06 AM | |||
| Topic: | History | |||
| Msg #: | 8 (top msg in thread) | |||
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In January 1988, the Kern County Board of Supervisors established the
Kern County Commission on Child Care. It was created to advise the
Board of Supervisors on all matters relating to child care with a major
focus on identifying service gaps and providing recommended solutions. In October 1991, the United States Congress established a federal Child Care and Development Block Grant (CCDBG) through which each state was allocated funds to assist low-income families in obtaining child care and development services. Subsequently, California developed a State Plan which specified that local communities should have a voice in the appropriation and allocation of CCDBG funds. In the same year, AB 2141 authored by Assemblywoman Jackie Speier was passed which requested each county to establish a Local Child Care and Development Planning Council (LPC) to identify priorities for CCDBG funds based on the needs of families.
There are currently 58 individual planning councils representing each county in California. The primary mission of the LPCs is to plan for child care and development services based on the needs of families in the local community. Through collaborative efforts with other individuals and organizations interested in the welfare of families, LPCs should also support the existing child care infrastructure by coordinating services that are locally available.
As a result of planning, collaboration, and support for the child care systems that currently exist, the LPCs plan and determine local priorities for new state and federal funds. In order to be fully effective, councils are highly encouraged to strengthen the partnerships with both public and private organizations in each county. By forming strong community partnerships, each group involved becomes empowered to share their ideas and concerns during the local planning process.
In 1992, the Kern County Board of Supervisors and the Kern County Superintendent of Schools jointly appointed the Kern County Commission on Child Care as the Local Child Care and Development Planning Council. This appointment further enhanced its ability to facilitate the development of a more comprehensive child care delivery system for Kern County.
On July 1, 1998, the Kern County Board of Supervisors re-constituted the Commission on Child Care. As a result, the name of the new Planning Council became the Kern County Child Care Council as it remains today.
Although new language on governing local child care planning councils is found in the welfare reform legislation, the purpose and scope of the LPC goes beyond child care programs funded by the federal block grant. LPCs are intended to serve as a forum to address the child care needs of all families in the community and in all child care programs - including both subsidized and non-subsidized child care.
