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INTRODUCTION On April 17,1991 the Associate Minister of Agriculture, Shirley McClellan, announced that Agricultural Initiatives Funds, provided by the Alberta Lottery Fund, would provide financial support to the Alberta Women's Institutes to administer a program to implement and evaluate a variety of child care projects in rural Alberta. The executive of Alberta Women's Institutes, in consultation with the presidents of four other Alberta rural women's groups, planned a committee to oversee the program. They appointed to this committee, two A. W. I, members as non- voting chairman and secretary treasurer, and four voting members representing Alberta Women's Institutes, Women of Unifarm, Alberta Women in Support of Agriculture and Alberta Farm Women's Network. This committee and the group Presidents met in Edmonton May 2,1991 for a planning session to launch the project. Subsequent meetings involved committee members only. The project began with press releases and the design and distribution of brochures. Response to the brochures was very good, with about 130 requests for applications from all over the Province. Application forms were mailed in response to every request. A criteria was established for accepting projects and the committee tried to choose those that had the highest likelihood of continuing when our assistance ceased. Seven projects were accepted for the fall session, July to December 1991, and twelve projects for spring, January to June 1992. Subsidy was paid at 65% of child care costs to a maximum of $ 4.00 per hour per family and payment was made at the close of the project and after receipt of signed time sheets and the user's evaluation. The purpose of this project was to plan, implement and evaluate a variety of child care demonstration projects that would meet the needs of farm families in Alberta. This report is a condensation of the observations, evaluations, achievements and failures that the 19 projects encountered during the test period. The report will discuss needs, purpose and benefits, of rural child care, costs, types of projects and some suggestions and recommendations for implementing them. There will also be a section for observations, recommendations and quotes from individual participants who hold common views. Alberta Rural Child Care Pilot Project Page 1
Object Description
Rating | |
Title | Rural Child Care Project |
Subject | Projects; Child Care; Rural; AWI |
Description | The Alberta Rural Child Care Pilot Project 1991-1992 |
Language | en |
Format | application/pdf |
Type | text |
Source | Alberta Women's Institutes |
Identifier | awi0811104 |
Date | 1992 |
Collection | Alberta Women's Institutes - Collective Memory |
Repository | AU Digital Library |
Copyright | For Private Study and Research Use Only |
Description
Title | Page 10 |
Format | application/pdf |
Source | AWI Collection |
Collection | Alberta Women's Institutes - Collective Memory |
Repository | AU Digital Library |
Copyright | For Private Study and Research Use Only |
Transcript | INTRODUCTION On April 17,1991 the Associate Minister of Agriculture, Shirley McClellan, announced that Agricultural Initiatives Funds, provided by the Alberta Lottery Fund, would provide financial support to the Alberta Women's Institutes to administer a program to implement and evaluate a variety of child care projects in rural Alberta. The executive of Alberta Women's Institutes, in consultation with the presidents of four other Alberta rural women's groups, planned a committee to oversee the program. They appointed to this committee, two A. W. I, members as non- voting chairman and secretary treasurer, and four voting members representing Alberta Women's Institutes, Women of Unifarm, Alberta Women in Support of Agriculture and Alberta Farm Women's Network. This committee and the group Presidents met in Edmonton May 2,1991 for a planning session to launch the project. Subsequent meetings involved committee members only. The project began with press releases and the design and distribution of brochures. Response to the brochures was very good, with about 130 requests for applications from all over the Province. Application forms were mailed in response to every request. A criteria was established for accepting projects and the committee tried to choose those that had the highest likelihood of continuing when our assistance ceased. Seven projects were accepted for the fall session, July to December 1991, and twelve projects for spring, January to June 1992. Subsidy was paid at 65% of child care costs to a maximum of $ 4.00 per hour per family and payment was made at the close of the project and after receipt of signed time sheets and the user's evaluation. The purpose of this project was to plan, implement and evaluate a variety of child care demonstration projects that would meet the needs of farm families in Alberta. This report is a condensation of the observations, evaluations, achievements and failures that the 19 projects encountered during the test period. The report will discuss needs, purpose and benefits, of rural child care, costs, types of projects and some suggestions and recommendations for implementing them. There will also be a section for observations, recommendations and quotes from individual participants who hold common views. Alberta Rural Child Care Pilot Project Page 1 |
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