- Advocacy and Community Building
- Activism tips/resources
- Ask the advocate
- Budget advocacy
- Child care/early care and education
- Child welfare
- Communities committed to children
- Community building
- Election advocacy
- Health
- Parent activism
- Parent activism in schools
- Parent leadership training
- Parent Voices
- Policy Smart / Children's advocates' roundtable
- Poverty/welfare
- Profiles in Action / Grassroots snapshots
- Racial justice
- Violence prevention
- Books for children
- Child Care and Early Care and Education
- Advocacy tips/resources
- Availability
- Budget advocacy
- California Child Development Corps
- Children with special needs
- Community resources
- Compensation and training
- Early care and education
- Elections
- Family child care
- Family/friend/neighbor care
- Hands-on activities
- Head Start
- Health
- Immigrant families
- Infant/toddler care
- Multicultural/diversity
- Parent activism
- Parent Voices
- Play in child care
- Preschool for all
- Promoting positive behavior
- Ready for school in the U.S.
- School readiness
- School-age child care
- Social/emotional development
- Teacher/provider activism
- Teacher/provider advice
- Teaching/learning
- Working with families
- Child Welfare
- Health
- Advocacy/community building
- Asthma/environmental health/toxins
- Child care
- Child development
- Children with special needs
- Community resources
- Dental health/vision
- Family support
- Health insurance
- Health outreach
- Infants/toddlers
- Injury prevention
- Mental health
- Multicultural/diversity
- Nutrition/hunger/obesity
- Parent activism
- Physical activity
- Raising kids
- School-based health
- Successful strategies for children's health
- Parents and Families
- As We Grow And Learn / Raising kids
- Child abuse prevention
- Child development and families
- Child welfare and families
- Children of prisoners
- Children with special needs
- Community resources/family support
- Divorce
- Domestic violence
- Family relationships
- Family support works!
- Grandparents/elders
- Hands-on activities
- Health
- Immigrant families
- Infants/toddlers
- Multicultural/diversity and families
- Parent activism in schools
- Parent activism on child care
- Parent activism on health
- Parent activism on poverty and welfare
- Parent activism tips/resources
- Parent and family advice
- Parent and teacher action
- Parent involvement in child care
- Parent Voices
- Pathways to parent leadership
- Positive parenting/discipline
- Poverty/income/welfare
- School readiness
- Social/emotional development
- Violence prevention
- Poverty/income/welfare
- Schools and School-Age Children
- Violence Prevention
Parents vote for kids
Parents are mobilizing around the elections as a way to campaign for programs that support children. As the Children’s Advocate goes to press, California still does not have a state budget, and cuts to children’s programs are not completely off the table. Meanwhile, many cities and counties are cutting programs for children and families—and some are trying to stave off deeper cuts with ballot measures to raise local taxes.
Proposed budget cuts are targeting “the programs low-income communities need the most,” says Astrid Campos, the LA Regional Organizer for the California Partnership. Many elected officials are advocates for children, but “in one of the hardest-hit cities…the Senator is not voting for his community. Why not? The low-income voting presence [there] is not strong enough,” she adds.
Educate your community—and your children
San Francisco mom Toni Hines registered voters and collected signatures to help get a measure on the ballot to off-set recent city budget cuts by taxing hotels an additional two percent. Hines also shows her daughter how to be politically active—the seven-year-old goes with her mom to the voting booth, rallies, community meetings, and even decided to speak at a First Five meeting about funding for children’s programs.
“I tell my daughter, ‘A lot of people fought and died for me to vote. It’s a privilege and obligation,’” says Hines, a parent advocate with Coleman Advocates for Children and Youth. “I am the go-to person in my family,” she adds. “They call me and ask, ‘Which way would you vote?’”
Another San Francisco mom Maritza Di Cicco talked with her nine- and fourteen-year-old children about the Hotel Initiative: “I told them, ‘That way you will have an afterschool program.’” Originally from Guatemala, Di Cicco is also with Coleman Advocates and a recent US citizen.
Even if parents cannot vote, they can “engage other community members and affect political decisions,” says Arnulfo De La Cruz, Associate Director of Coleman Advocates. Coleman parents are also campaigning for a measure that would allow undocumented parents to vote for school board members. “Undocumented parents have a powerful story to tell,” he adds.
Work with politicians to support children
After the elections, parents plan to continue speaking out to elected officials. “It doesn’t take a lot to make a difference,” says Diana Spatz, once a single mother on welfare who went on to found LIFETIME. LIFETIME encourages parents to meet with officials—or even call about an issue. An aide once told parents that if the legislative office got five phone calls about an issue, they would brief staff, Love recalls. Parents also sent baby shoes to an Assembly Member with notes reminding her who would be hurt by the budget cuts, she adds.
Parents need to mobilize, adds De La Cruz, because California’s budget climate is the result “of having a whole group of parents shut out of the system.”
For more election-related resources, see Election 2010: Nonpartisan election resources
Use our articles
Use the Children's Advocate in your work! Feel free to reprint these articles, as handouts or in your own publication – just credit us and be sure to send us a copy.
From Fall 2010 Issue | Raising kids series
Related topics: Advocacy and Community Building, As We Grow And Learn / Raising kids, Election advocacy, Parent activism, Parent activism in schools, Parent activism in schools, Parent activism in schools, Parent activism on school equity, Parent activism on school equity, Parent and family advice, Parents and Families
Other: Contact us | Give us your feedback | How to use this article | Subscribe
