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Meeting an unmet need: A pilot project to address environmental hazards in low-income family child care provider homes

Carolyn A. Kawecki, RN, MA, None, National Center for Healthy Housing, 10227 Wincopin Circle, Suite 100, Columbia, MD 21044, 410-772-2779, ckawecki@centerforhealthyhousing.org and Patricia Magnuson, BFA, MUP, Housing and Community Development Work Group, The Enterprise Foundation, 80 Fifth Avenue, 7th floor, New York, NY 10011.

Low-income neighborhoods are at high risk for childhood lead poisoning and other residential environmental hazards. The majority of children in low-income neighborhoods receive child care through home-based or family child care programs. Renovations to family child care homes thus have the potential to affect many more children than repairs to single-family homes. But low-income child care providers face special obstacles (e.g., too low an income to qualify for many housing rehabilitation programs, a need to sustain the business during renovation, lack of coordination between child care regulatory agencies and housing rehabilitation programs, etc.) The Home-Based Child Care Lead Safety Program, a unique pilot in Rochester and Syracuse, NY offers a model for addressing attitudinal, financial, and programmatic barriers to housing rehabilitation in these units. The two-year pilot rehabilitates 25 licensed home-based child care units, using a combination of federal, state, and private funds, to benefit the health of over 200 children. Activities include lead hazard reduction, improvements in energy efficiency and indoor air quality, and safety-related repairs. Intensive education for providers and parents of children served by the program occurs before and after repairs. Business opportunities are preserved through the creation of a lead safe child care relocation site. The program establishes new collaborations between local child care resource and referral agencies, community development corporations, and national experts in community development, affordable housing, and children’s environmental health. Next steps include dissemination of an implementation guide with model documents and practices to reduce replication costs in other communities.

Learning Objectives:

Keywords: Child Care, Environmental Health Hazards

Presenting author's disclosure statement:
I have a significant financial interest/arrangement or affiliation with any organization/institution whose products or services are being discussed in this session.
Relationship: Grants

Disparities in Vulnerable Populations: Responses in Home, School, and Community Settings

The 132nd Annual Meeting (November 6-10, 2004) of APHA