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Public Employee Press
Day Care at Bellevue
Model for the City Members dream come true
Day Care open 24/7/365
for Bellevue workers By JANE LaTOUR The need
for day care in New York City is vast. As early as 1971, Bellevue Hospital and
its community of caregivers realized that this was one big problem that had a
solution. On Sept. 19, the long road to providing full-service, on-site day care
for Bellevue employees and the nearby community reached fruition with a ribbon-cutting
ceremony marking the opening of the Bellevue Hospital Child Care Center.
DC 37 Executive Director Lillian Roberts told the assembled gathering of politicians,
parents and their tiny offspring that this is an issue whose time has arrived.
Bellevue has led the way and provided the model. Now we have to follow it
and get the city involved in a plan to set up similar facilities at all our public
hospitals. Child care is a necessity for working parents,
particularly hospital workers, who are on the job around the clock, she
said. With a child care facility like the one here at Bellevue, our members
and other hospital workers will know that their children are well cared for, so
they can they care for the ill and injured. A tour through the
sparkling center revealed the tender care and thought that went into the planning.
Tiny tables and chairs, puppets and puzzles, books and toys, and every kind of
educational opportunity await the children who enter its doors. A highly trained
staff of caring teachers and administrators watches and guides their every moment.
New York City Council Speaker Christine Quinn was quick to voice her support
for child care centers throughout the Health and Hospitals Corp. U.S. Rep. Carolyn
Maloney recalled herexperiences as a young, working mother facing the void thatexisted
in suitable facilities for child care. She ecstatically hailed the Bellevue Center
as the flagship leading the way for what government should be doing.
Maloney noted that she couldnt think of anything more important than support
for working families. Melvin Bell, president of Bellevues Board
of Directors, labeled the enterprise a marvelous labor of love. It took
30 years to realize this dream, many contributors, hard work and extraordinary
dedication, he said. Sarah Maldonado, the executive director of the center,
spoke briefly and movingly about the achievement. A nationally recognized expert
in child care, Ms. Maldonado was properly introduced as the heart of Bellevue
Day Care! The Centers on-site services can accommodate and
assist 300 families a year to get child care service of the highest quality.Local
1407 Executive Board member Franklin Taylors granddaughter, Terrayah Grant,
3, is enrolled. I think its great! said Taylor, a Systems Analyst
for the Dept. of Health and Mental Hygiene. Taylors daughter, Nicole
Taylor, sang the praises of the center. Its unique in New York City,
she said. I appreciate the way they interact with my daughter. I didnt
have such great day care for my other two kids. Before she started at Bellevue,
the 3-year-old attended another facility. Bellevue allows my daughter to
express herself, said Taylor. Before going to her job as a Patient
Care Associate in Belle-vues Internal Medicine Clinic at Bellevue Hospital,
Taisha Freeman drops her son, Amar Jones, 3, at the center. Its location right
in the heart of the hospital makes it very convenient. I saw a posting about
the center in my union newspaper, said Ms. Freeman, a member of Municipal
Hospital Employees Union Local 420. The program is just great, she
added. There are so many teachers working with my son. Making
life easier Alexa Garcia, a member of Clerical-Administrative Employees
Local 1549, enrolled her son Christian, 2, after co-workers recommended it to
her. Hes adjusted well. They have a good routine and it makes it easier
for me to slip out, said the satisfied mom a short time after he started
there. The mother of two leaves her home in the Bronx at 7 a.m., drops
her daughter off at school and takes public transportation to Bellevue. She brings
Christian to the center, spends a little time with him, unloads her disposable
diapers and other supplies for the day, and is then able to check in at the hospitals
Medical Records Dept. by 9:30 a.m. So far its wonderful! she
said. The Bellevue Child Care Center had a long journey and overcame
many obstacles on its way to becoming a model for emulation citywide. As co-chair
of the Bellevue Hospital Child Care Committee, Local 1549 2nd Vice President Ralph
Palladino participated in every step with a passionate commitment to the cause.
On Sept. 19, he expressed deep satisfaction.
Its been an unbelievable experience, he said. I attribute
my involvement to my mother, who was a single parent and worked in the garment
industry. I knew that other countries had childcare. During World War II, the
government set up child care. These were our models. Now the Bellevue Center shows
that it can be done. Mayor Bloomberg is talking about childcare. Weve heard
the speaker of the City Council talking about child care. Our union is behind
the push for child care. We can do it! Over 25 percent of DC 37s
members have children under 13. The high cost of day care means that the citys
low-paid working people must dedicate a disproportionate part of their income
to this essential part of their budgets. Workers cant give their full attention
to the job if they are worrying about what is happening with their children. Many
must make difficult choices between being late or absent from work
and leaving a sick child home alone or with a less-than-desirable child care provider.
DC 37s participation in the New York Union Child Care Coalition addresses
this problem by fighting for funding for vouchers to subsidize day care costs.
A key activist on the issue is Moira Dolan, an assistant director of DC 37s
Research and Negotiations Dept. In coalition with other unions, weve
lobbied for and won over $20 million in state money to provide child care subsidies
for over 2,600 union families, she pointed out. Campaigning
on many fronts Dolan estimated that the average subsidy per family
was close to $5,000. This past year alone, over 600 of these families were
DC 37 members. In addition, because some members had more than one child receiving
the subsidy, over 800 of our members children were in better quality child
care than they would have been otherwise. That is something to be proud of and
to build on! In addition to the opening of the Bellevue Center,
some promising steps have been taken recently. The Womens Concerns Committee
and the administration at Elmhurst Hospital are working together to develop a
child care center. They have already dedicated space and are seeking a provider
to set up their day care center. Another campaign, directed at Albany,
is aimed at getting the governor to review all aspects of child care funding,
regulation, and access. The needs are all related: to increase funding for child
care and early education, to pay workers in the child care field better, and to
implement a quality assurance rating system so parents can readily
see the objective levels of safety and quality to compare facilities. The
Bellevue Hospital Child Care Center has set a high standard by establishing a
quality facility that offers parents peace of mind about their childrens
welfare while they are in its care. Meeting the huge demand for safe, affordable
quality child care is a top priority for working parents. In the AFL-CIOs
annual Ask a Working Woman survey, women list their top legislative
goals: 91 percent of all responders cited child care as their number two priority,
just after health care. The demand is growing and the constituency is ready.
The model is there. Its up to us to show the need and demand action. The
DC 37 Research and Negotiations Dept. is conducting a survey to assess members
needs of DC 37 members. The goal is to complete the survey by the end of December.
A copy of the form is available on the DC 37 Website at www.dc37.net.
(PDF)*

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