SACRAMENTO, CA—More than 400 family child care providers, parents, children, and community leaders rallied at the state capitol in Sacramento on May 28, 2008, to support child care for working families and to persuade state lawmakers to reject drastic budget cuts proposed by California Governor Arnold Schwarzenegger.
Almost two months later on July 22, more than 50 child care providers conducted follow up visits with key legislators to urge state officials to enact a fair budget for all working families in California. Both events were organized by Child Care Providers United (CCPUnited) of California.
Participants in this summer’s Lobby Day events journeyed to Sacramento from more than 20 California cities and counties. Many of the attendees made the long trip by bus, some traveling for eight to ten hours throughout the night, to call on legislators to oppose budget cuts that would hurt families and especially California’s youngest children.
Bishop Eugene Jones from Change of Heart Ministries in San Bernardino County speaks at the capitol.“The children you see here today are here because of the work that parents and providers do,” said Bishop Eugene Jones, pastor of Change of Heart Ministries in San Bernardino County, who spoke on the capitol steps on May 28. “Our communities are under siege, because children have no opportunities. We call on the governor to have a change of heart—today.”
Providers, parents, children, and supporters assembled that day from Sacramento to San Diego, from Fresno to San Joaquin, from San Francisco to Coachella, and from Kings County to Porterville.
“We are the many faces of California,” said Rasiene Reece-Carter, a provider leader from Lancaster in Los Angeles County. “We work and struggle every day to make sure our children get the best, because they deserve the best.”
Assemblyman DeLeon (D) stands with children of providers and their families.Assemblymember Kevin de Leon (D-LA) agreed. De Leon is a strong supporter of family child care providers and the author of last year’s assembly bill (AB) 1164 (A Voice for Family Child Care). He acknowledged the tremendous strides made by providers and urged them to keep fighting and speaking out despite Schwarzenegger’s veto of AB 1164 last year.
“We need to hear from you, because you know what your needs are,” de Leon said. “The governor may have vetoed our bill, but he cannot veto us.”
Providers are making their voices heard with concrete results. Continued statewide activism by parents, child care providers, advocates, and the California Corps, convinced Schwarzenegger to withdraw his planned cuts to the successful Comprehensive Approaches to Raising Educational Standards (CARES) program, which offers stipends to thousands of California teachers and quality child care providers.
Additionally, an influential assembly budget committee rejected many of the governor’s proposed child care cuts after listening to recommendations by a coalition of providers, parents, advocates, and community leaders including impassioned testimony from CCPUnited member Xochitl Segura from Oxnard.
Child Care Providers United of California member Xochitl Teran“I’m making a difference in the lives of many families,” said Segura. “Without providers like me, parents won’t have choices.”
Fittingly, it was 11-year-old Adrian Angeles, a fifth-grader from Tulare County, who spoke the most powerful words of the day when he said to a California legislator, “I missed school today, because I think this is too important. You should, too.”