Hartford Courant

CHILD CARE HUBS HELP ‘ALLEVIATE THE STRESS’

Initiative targets working families struggling with remote learning

- By Rebecca Lurye

HARTFORD — Seven child care hubs are opening around Hartford this month to provide safe, in-person learning environmen­ts for young students while their schools are closed and their parents or guardians are at work.

The Learning Hubs, operated by some of the city’s largest community organizati­ons, will serve about 300 Hartford children in kindergart­en through third grade who are enrolled in hybrid or remote learning, have a working parent or caregiver, and come from a low-to-moderate income family.

A family of four can make up to $41,000 per year to be eligible, according to the city.

With limited space, the initiative must target the families with the greatest need, Mayor Luke Bronin said Thursday at a news conference about the partnershi­p between the city, Hartford Public Schools and the non-profit organizati­ons running the hubs.

These non-profits include the Community Renewal Team, the Boys & Girls Clubs of Hartford, the YWCA Hartford Region, YMCA of Greater Hartford and Catholic Charities. The hubs will be spread throughout the city geographic­ally, a necessity as there is no transporta­tion being provided to the sites.

At CRT’s Windsor Street

building, about 100 students will work out of the eight classrooms that previously held the organizati­on’s preschool program until the summer of 2019. Those spaces have been freshened up for their next life as Learning Hub classrooms, where — like at all the hubs around the city — classroom monitors will supervise students as they do their work.

Five families have already signed up with CRT, and the organizati­on has given out a dozen other applicatio­ns, said Leslie Giordano, director of early care and education.

“The families who have signed up so far, they have had either another parent taking time off from work or a grandma helping out, the aunt helping out, older siblings,” Giordano said. “We’re very happy to alleviate the stress working families are going through.”

In some cases, families have had to turn to relatives outside their own household for help, increasing their risk of spreading or contractin­g the coronaviru­s. But mainly, Giordano said, parents and caregivers have expressed concerns that their children are falling behind in school as a result of hybrid and remote learning.

At one of the hubs, “I think they will get the opportunit­y either to continue on track or just get that consistent schedule you get in school,” she said.

Families do not need to be connected to any of the organizati­ons to apply for space in the hubs, she added.

The free program will also provide breakfast, lunch and snacks, as well as breaks for students to safely stretch and play. All the hubs will enforce mask wearing and social distancing and follow guidelines for preventing the spread of COVID-19, the city said.

The $1.5 million program is being funded by Community Developmen­t Block Grants and $500,000 from the Hartford Foundation for Public Giving.

The hubs are expected to open by the end of January,

To learn more about signing up, residents can visit HartfordCT.gov/learninghu­bs or call the Department of Families, Children, Youth, and Recreation at 860-757-9595 during business hours.

 ?? KASSI JACKSON/HARTFORD COURANT ?? Seven child care hubs are opening around Hartford this month to provide safe, in-person learning environmen­ts for young students while their schools are closed due to coronaviru­s restrictio­ns and their parents or guardians are at work.
KASSI JACKSON/HARTFORD COURANT Seven child care hubs are opening around Hartford this month to provide safe, in-person learning environmen­ts for young students while their schools are closed due to coronaviru­s restrictio­ns and their parents or guardians are at work.
 ?? KASSI JACKSON/HARTFORD COURANT ?? Seven classrooms have been set up to hold up to 13 students each, as part of a new Learning Hub program through partnershi­ps with the city of Hartford and other local organizati­ons.
KASSI JACKSON/HARTFORD COURANT Seven classrooms have been set up to hold up to 13 students each, as part of a new Learning Hub program through partnershi­ps with the city of Hartford and other local organizati­ons.

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