NEW ORLEANS (AP) — Last summer, Derrika Richard felt stuck. She didn’t have enough money to afford child care for her three youngest children, ages 1, 2 and 3. Yet the demands of caring for them on a daily basis made it impossible for Richard, a hairstylist, to work. One child care assistance program rejected her because she wasn’t working enough. It felt like an unsolvable quandary: Without care, she couldn’t work. And without work, she couldn’t afford care.
But Richard’s life changed in the fall, when, thanks to a new city-funded program for low-income families called City Seats, she enrolled the three children at Clara’s Little Lambs, a child care center in the Westbank neighborhood of New Orleans. For the first time, she’s earning enough to pay her bills and afford online classes.
“It actually paved the way for me to go to school,” Richard said one morning this spring, after walking the three children to their classrooms. City Seats, she said, “changed my life.”
Related articles:
Related suggestion:
Watercare signals possible 25% increase in water ratesHong Kong exRussia, Germany, UK urge restraint as Iranian threat puts Middle East on edgeUS China news update: USA renews warning it would defend Philippines after China spatBrazil topBNDES to chair D20, group of major development banksAt least 5 dead, 27 injured after fire in Hong Kong buildingIDB, Brazil’s Central Bank sign agreement to support green investmentsYouth councillor 'shocked' by decision to axe councilBrazil could join group of oil producers, exporters
3.8307s , 6498.1796875 kb
Copyright © 2024 Powered by Free child care from higher taxes? These cities subsidize daycare ,Culture Channel news portal