Pittsburgh Post-Gazette

Family support centers face closure in county

- By Kate Giammarise

A potential shift in state funding could impact — or potentiall­y close — up to eight local family support centers, which serve families with young children in some of Allegheny County’s most impoverish­ed communitie­s.

The 28 centers in Allegheny County offer parenting classes and support, promote healthy child developmen­t and help detect developmen­tal delays early, and aid families with other services, such as making sure they have health insurance, up-todate immunizati­ons and even things like food and clothing.

Ten of the centers — in Clairton, Duquesne, Homestead, McKeesport, McKees Rocks, Penn Hills, Tarentum, Wilkinsbur­g and Wilmerding, and in the Pittsburgh neighborho­od of Hazelwood — are operated by the Allegheny Intermedia­te Unit.

A solicitati­on put out earlier this month by state officials limits this funding stream to only two applicants per county and not more than $280,600 per applicant, per county — which would represent a cut of at least $1.3 million to these 10 centers,

and mean the state would only fund two of them.

If the state moves forward, “the AIU will be forced to close multiple family centers while slashing staff and services supporting families at the remaining sites — all within the next two months,” AIU officials said in a letter sent to legislator­s.

AIU officials declined to comment to the Pittsburgh Post-Gazette.

Limiting this funding to two centers per county “will almost ensure the program will not reach the highest risk families,” Marc Cherna, Allegheny County human services director, wrote in a letter earlier this month to state officials, a copy of which was obtained by the Post-Gazette. Mr. Cherna also touted the centers’ work in reducing child abuse and neglect.

“Each of the [Family Support Centers] is intentiona­lly located in high-poverty, distressed towns and communitie­s and have become hubs for crucial family services,” Mr. Cherna wrote.

Several centers, such as those in Wilmerding, Clairton, McKeesport and Duquesne, are in communitie­s where roughly half of all children live in poverty. These communitie­s are the focus of the Post-Gazette’s Growing Up Through the Cracks, a series that examines the harmful impacts of concentrat­ed poverty on children and communitie­s.

State human services officials declined to comment “due to legal restrictio­ns of the procuremen­t code.” The request for applicatio­ns was posted May 2, and applicatio­ns are due June 6.

“We cannot comment until selections are made,” said Erin James, a spokeswoma­n for the department.

State Sen. Jay Costa, DForest Hills, the chamber’s minority leader, said he and other legislator­s have reached out to the governor to get the state to rescind its solicitati­on, or at least slow down any abrupt change in how funding is allocated.

“They’re trying to shift money to other parts of the state. We’ve got a strong family support network that we’ve developed over the years ... and that’s going all be pulled out from under us,” Mr. Costa said.

“These centers are very valuable to the people they serve,” said Rep. Austin Davis, D-McKeesport, whose district is home to several of the centers.

Mr. Davis said he has been in contact with Gov. Tom Wolf’s office.

“They are working, I think, to find a positive solution,” he said.

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