Next Up:
0:00
0:00
-
Listen Listen
Early Childhood Education
Last year, homelessness declined overall in the region, but not for families with children. And service providers say even that was an undercount.
-
A family shelter in Woodland Hills is one of a few but growing number of shelters offering childcare services on-site.
-
Experts urge honesty as ICE activity continues in L.A.
-
Starting this November, the state will offer free childcare to families regardless of income.
-
The $1.3 million initiative, which will train and support families and caregivers, is funded through an 18-month grant.
-
The county joins the state in offering bailout dollars for surging liability insurance premiums.
-
Tried-and-true spots families love for play, exploration, and burning energy.
-
More than 3.6 million children born in 2020 amid the COVID-19 global pandemic are walking into elementary schools across the country this fall.
-
With family shelters currently full, L.A.'s homeless services agency is crafting messaging for providers when they have to turn families away.
-
This fall at least 200,000 California students are expected to enroll in transitional kindergarten, which serves as a bridge between preschool and kindergarten.
-
Family child care providers in the union will get $90 million in one-time payments to help stabilize the industry.
Support trustworthy childhood education coverage
As family housing resources shrink in L.A., one family has left what they know in California behind to start a life in the Midwest, where housing costs are vastly lower.
Listen
0:45
Sponsored message
More Stories
-
New parents and pregnant Californians can now request the support of a doula through Medi-Cal, but for the program to succeed, the state needs to attract more birthworkers to the program.
-
As of 2023, people who get health insurance through Medi-Cal can get doula support for free. One problem: Most doulas have yet to enroll as providers.
-
The rate of increase of poverty among young children grew at a much higher rate than the general population from 2021 to 2022.
-
The Biden administration proposed a new rule that could give preschool teachers in the federal program a pay increase of about $10,000.
-
The Cal State system offers 30 days of paid family leave. Faculty who have authorized a strike are demanding one semester.
-
The rate of infants dying in California before their first birthday ticked up slightly last year and is part of a troubling trend.
-
A U.S. Department of Agriculture report finds that many people who are eligible for the Women, Infants and Children program are missing out.
-
Under a new law that goes into effect Jan. 1, 2024, workers and their partners can get up to five days of leave for a miscarriage, stillbirth, failed adoption, and other types of reproductive loss.
-
Federal pandemic relief funds for childcare programs expired Sept. 30, leaving providers around the country worried about shutting their doors. In California, the state’s put in some stopgap measures.
-
Elly Yu, our investigations reporter, joins the education team.
-
We take this question to the best experts in SoCal on this topic — parents — who give their tips for facing the unknown during pregnancy.
-
With rising housing costs, pushback from landlords and homeowners associations, and a complex web of regulations, it’s a wonder home-based providers exist at all.