New program launched to help local families with child care

A new program to help Wyandotte County families gain access to child care will launch at 5:30 p.m. today, Aug. 15, at the Children’s Campus of Kansas City, 444 Minnesota Ave., Kansas City, Kansas. The event is open to the public.

The Family Conservancy, a nonprofit serving at-risk children and families throughout the Kansas City metro area, is launching Start Young.

Start Young is a public-private collaborative designed to improve child care in Wyandotte County, increasing access to high-quality, full-day, full-year child care for working families, according to a spokesman.

The program will work with 16 existing child care centers in the community to help improve child care programs, to help serve more children.

A $1 million grant over three years was received from the state of Kansas, according to a spokesman. The grant funds have to be matched with private funding, and several Wyandotte County businesses have invested in this project.

Currently, Wyandotte County only has capacity to serve about 40 percent of working families with young children, according to the spokesman. Many of the programs that are available are not full-day, full-year programs. Further complicating the issue, even when parents can find high-quality care that meets their needs, many have difficulty paying for it.

Access to high-quality child care provides benefits to parents and children across Wyandotte County by allowing parents to be gainfully employed so they have the resources to better support their families, and by preparing children for success in school and life by maximizing the crucial period of early brain development, the spokesman stated.

Evidence shows that investment in these areas increases workforce participation, high school graduation rates, and community health outcomes; while decreasing rates of abuse, neglect, early parenthood, substance abuse, and incarceration, according to the spokesman.

The Start Young three-year pilot program is expected to help 1,200 children in the first year. The funding for this project is provided by Kansas Children’s Cabinet and Trust Fund through Communities Aligned in Early Development and Education (CAEDE), and matched 1:1 with funds from the private sector, including investments from Buffett Early Childhood Fund, Wyandotte Health Foundation, Stanley H. Durwood Foundation, Olathe Wesleyan Church, Hall Family Foundation, and other pending and secured funders.

Community partners who will deliver the project include the Mid-America Regional Council, United Way of Wyandotte County, Juniper Gardens Children’s Project, and Child Care Aware of Kansas. In addition, 16 Wyandotte County-based child care providers have been identified to participate in the project.

Doubleheader tonight at T-Bones Stadium because of rainout Tuesday night

The Kansas City T-Bones and the Fargo-Moorhead RedHawks were rained out owing to unplayable field conditions Tuesday night at T-Bones Stadium.

The two teams will play two seven inning games Wednesday night, Aug. 15, with game one beginning at 5:30 p.m.

The T-Bones are expected to start right-handed pitcher Hunter Adkins (6-3, 3.12) while Fargo will turn to right-handed pitcher D.J. Brown (8-2, 3.91). In game two the T-Bones have yet to name a starter in a matchup with left-handed pitcher Will Solomon (8-6, 4.35) for the RedHawks.

The games will play on Warrior Wednesday—free Ticket with military ID, presented by Warhorses for Veterans. There will be pre-game autographs with select players, and a Sizzle selfie.

The T-Bones are second in the American Association with a .633 winning percentage and a 50-29 record; they hold a half game lead in the wild card standings for a wild card spot in the post-season race.

Season, group tickets, mini-plans and nightly party suites are on sale now and can be purchased by visiting the box office at T-Bones Stadium. Call the box office at 913-328-5618 or purchase and print at www.tbonesbaseball.com. Box office hours are 10 a.m. to 4 p.m. Monday – Friday and 10 a.m. to 2 p.m. Saturday.
– Story from T-Bones