Childhood Begins at
Home Campaign Launched
We are pleased to
announce that Childhood Begins at Home, a home visiting campaign PPC is a
partner in, officially launched this week with an event at the Lancaster Women
and Babies Hospital with Lancaster District Attorney Craig
Stedman, Mary Lee Steffy of Nurse-Family Partnership and state
Representatives Bryan Cutler, Keith Greiner, Brett Miller, Steven Mentzer
and Mike Sturla.
Far too many of
Pennsylvania’s youngest children are at risk of child abuse and neglect,
live in poverty, and experience poor education and health outcomes. At
times, parents and others raising these children also need support to
improve their education, health and economic stability.
Together with our
partners, the Campaign is working to educate the public and policymakers
about the benefits of evidence-based home visiting for at-risk families and
communities and ensure these vital programs receive a $6.5 million increase
in the 2018-19 state budget.
We’ll also be
holding events in Delaware, Lehigh, Luzerne and Washington counties to
again bring together policymakers, child welfare, law enforcement and
health leaders, representatives from four evidence-based home visiting
models, and families who have benefitted from voluntary home visits.
The Campaign is just
getting started spreading the news that evidence-based home visiting can
lead to better outcomes, so stay tuned!
Kinship Caregiver Navigator Program Bill Passes
Committee Vote
House Bill 2133,
which would create a statewide Kinship Caregiver Navigator Program, was
voted out of the House Children and Youth Committee on Tuesday. PPC extends
its gratitude to Chairwoman Watson, Minority Chair Scott Conklin and
Representative Eddie Day Pashinski for their leadership and to all the
members who voted in support of the bill.
In addition to HB
2133, the committee also approved HB 1539, which would allow for temporary
emergency guardianship for grandparents raising grandchildren due to the
opioid crisis, and HR 390, which would task the Joint State Government
Commission with studying the trend of grandfamilies across the state. PPC
supported both pieces of legislation.
We are still
collecting caregiver stories so there is time for families to tell us about
how HB 2133 would positively impact them. Grandparents or other relatives
raising grandchildren outside of the child welfare system who would like to
share their story can email Ashleigh Brunsink. abrunsink@papartnerships.org
Child Care and
Development Block Grant (CCDBG) State Plan Update
Child care funding
received a huge win earlier this year when legislation passed in Washington
that included an unprecedented increase for the Child Care and Development
Block Grant (CCDBG), Pennsylvania’s main source of federal support for the
Child Care Works subsidy program. The historic investment would nearly
double the commonwealth’s CCDBG discretionary funding in FY 2018 and
provide an opportunity to not only reduce the unmet need across the state,
but also make important improvements to child care quality standards.
Along with the funding increase at the federal level, the Pennsylvania
Office of Child Development and Early Learning (OCDEL) has been hard at
work developing the CCDBG state plan for 2019-21 and this week announced it
will release the plan to the public on April 26, 2018. The plan will likely
include a detailed proposal on how to effectively allocate the CCDBG
increase and the priorities OCDEL will focus on in the coming years.
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