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A l b e r t a ' s r u r a l c h i l d c a r e p r o j e c t Olson: Chair of the Alberta Rural Child Care Pilot Project Norecn Olson, chair of the Alberta Rural Child Care Pilot Project that includes representatives from Women of Unifarm, Alberta Women in Support of Agriculture, Alberta Farm Women's Network and AWI, says that seven groups have been sponsored to receive a portion of $ 75,000 in grant money. " We have them all the way from the little project which will be one person, one family and one baby sitter, up to projects that involve five families and ten kids," says Olson from her farm south of Olds. ' That's the whole idea here is to fund a variety of projects so we could find out what really worked." Unfortunately, programs devised for areas with a higher population density and regular work schedules do not function well for farm families like the Walp-ers and their three young children. According to Sandra, to place their children in conventional child care would cost the family up to $ 1,000 per month. Twice each day she would have to make a 100 kilometre round- trip drive to the nearest facility and with the inflexible hours she could never work after supper. Should the weather turn bad and the fields unworkable, the family would still have to pay child care even though they are not attending. And for families without older members, teenagers or neighbors willing and able to help, the alternative is to take the children out to the field. " It's hard on kids," says Olson. " Kids, little kids especially, shouldn't be away from home 12 and 14 hours at a stretch and that's why rural kids don't fit into the regular day home system. Those people want to have regular hours and you can't blame them." Across the province, more than 60 people requested applications for the pilot project and the group received about 20 completed application forms. The committee set out a number of guidelines for evaluation including: need; a unique approach; the amount of community involvement and support; a sound proposal; the details of project administration; the potential for success; and the potential for continuation beyond the funding period. But says Olson looking at a stack of " We had to stick to ones that we thought had a chance of functioning afterwards and teaching us something." applications: The first thing on the list of criteria was need. We immediately gave that up because everybody needed it. . . If you fund everyone of these, there are thousands more of them out there. We had to stick to ones that we thought had a chance of functioning afterwards and teaching us something." Olson added that many of the letters would " break your heart." Letters including messages like this one from a Brown-vale woman. " Our son was in a farm accident. He was three at the time and stuck his finger in a swather knife. The machine wasn't running but we were pulling the knife out and, even after repeated warnings, he still stuck his finger in. I spent eight days at the University Hospital with him while they put his finger back on. Luckily it took and he's fine but the memory will always be with me and it still really bothers me." While the Brownvale proposal was rejected, the committee recently agreed to fund child care programs in Bentley, Elnora, High Prairie, Cluny, Innisfail, and Hanna- Spondin. But in a unique venture sponsored by the Alberta Women's Institute and funded by Alberta Initiatives and the Wild Rose Foundation, women are getting a chance to address the problems facing rural child care initiatives. in Elnora, five families with 10 children have compiled a care giver registry of 23 people with cooperation from the FCSS, Elnora Agriculture Society, Lousana j Recreation Board and the Elnora Village Office. The care givers include students, : seniors and other farmers able to lend a i hand periodically. Gordon Beck presents Pine Lake community gift to newly weds, Carole and Doug Sawyer ^ ried Aug. 17, 1991)
Object Description
Rating | |
Title | Pine Lake History - 1990-1999 |
Subject | AWI: Pine Lake Branch |
Description | Branch History |
Language | en |
Format | application/pdf |
Type | text |
Source | Alberta Women's Institutes |
Identifier | awi0811091 |
Date | 2007 |
Collection | Alberta Women's Institutes - Collective Memory |
Repository | AU Digital Library |
Copyright | For Private Study and Research Use Only |
Description
Title | Page 18 |
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 | A l b e r t a ' s r u r a l c h i l d c a r e p r o j e c t Olson: Chair of the Alberta Rural Child Care Pilot Project Norecn Olson, chair of the Alberta Rural Child Care Pilot Project that includes representatives from Women of Unifarm, Alberta Women in Support of Agriculture, Alberta Farm Women's Network and AWI, says that seven groups have been sponsored to receive a portion of $ 75,000 in grant money. " We have them all the way from the little project which will be one person, one family and one baby sitter, up to projects that involve five families and ten kids," says Olson from her farm south of Olds. ' That's the whole idea here is to fund a variety of projects so we could find out what really worked." Unfortunately, programs devised for areas with a higher population density and regular work schedules do not function well for farm families like the Walp-ers and their three young children. According to Sandra, to place their children in conventional child care would cost the family up to $ 1,000 per month. Twice each day she would have to make a 100 kilometre round- trip drive to the nearest facility and with the inflexible hours she could never work after supper. Should the weather turn bad and the fields unworkable, the family would still have to pay child care even though they are not attending. And for families without older members, teenagers or neighbors willing and able to help, the alternative is to take the children out to the field. " It's hard on kids," says Olson. " Kids, little kids especially, shouldn't be away from home 12 and 14 hours at a stretch and that's why rural kids don't fit into the regular day home system. Those people want to have regular hours and you can't blame them." Across the province, more than 60 people requested applications for the pilot project and the group received about 20 completed application forms. The committee set out a number of guidelines for evaluation including: need; a unique approach; the amount of community involvement and support; a sound proposal; the details of project administration; the potential for success; and the potential for continuation beyond the funding period. But says Olson looking at a stack of " We had to stick to ones that we thought had a chance of functioning afterwards and teaching us something." applications: The first thing on the list of criteria was need. We immediately gave that up because everybody needed it. . . If you fund everyone of these, there are thousands more of them out there. We had to stick to ones that we thought had a chance of functioning afterwards and teaching us something." Olson added that many of the letters would " break your heart." Letters including messages like this one from a Brown-vale woman. " Our son was in a farm accident. He was three at the time and stuck his finger in a swather knife. The machine wasn't running but we were pulling the knife out and, even after repeated warnings, he still stuck his finger in. I spent eight days at the University Hospital with him while they put his finger back on. Luckily it took and he's fine but the memory will always be with me and it still really bothers me." While the Brownvale proposal was rejected, the committee recently agreed to fund child care programs in Bentley, Elnora, High Prairie, Cluny, Innisfail, and Hanna- Spondin. But in a unique venture sponsored by the Alberta Women's Institute and funded by Alberta Initiatives and the Wild Rose Foundation, women are getting a chance to address the problems facing rural child care initiatives. in Elnora, five families with 10 children have compiled a care giver registry of 23 people with cooperation from the FCSS, Elnora Agriculture Society, Lousana j Recreation Board and the Elnora Village Office. The care givers include students, : seniors and other farmers able to lend a i hand periodically. Gordon Beck presents Pine Lake community gift to newly weds, Carole and Doug Sawyer ^ ried Aug. 17, 1991) |
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