Y, Waynesboro Public Schools team up to offer Pre-K afterschool

The Waynesboro YMCA and Waynesboro Public Schools will partner in the fall to offer pre-kindergarten afterschool care at Wayne Hills, meeting a long-identified need in the Waynesboro community.

“The Waynesboro Y will be providing a valuable service that many working parents have requested for several years,” said Robin Crowder, the superintendent of Waynesboro Public Schools, which will be moving all of its Pre-K students to Wayne Hills as part of a plan adopted by the Waynesboro School Board to free up classroom space at the city’s four elementary schools.

Approximately 140 students will be on-site at Wayne Hills for the daylong Pre-K, Crowder said. The growth of Pre-K into being a daylong program in recent years has created a need for afterchool care for Pre-K youngsters as single parents and working parents of Pre-K’ers have found themselves tasked with the same challenge that parents of older children have in terms of finding quality afterschool care.

A group of parents approached the city a few years ago to start a discussion on what could be done to accommodate the need, but that review didn’t lead to anything in terms of action to address the need at that time.

The Y did its own review of what it might be able to do to provide Pre-K afterschool care, but YMCA executive director Jeff Fife said the Y’s facility at 648 S. Wayne Ave. “doesn’t give us the flexibility to add another classroom, and we’ve been turning down families requesting the service. ”

The decision earlier this year by the school system to move its Pre-K classes under one roof at Wayne Hills created another opportunity to look at what could be done to provide Pre-K afterschool. Officials with the school system and with the Y worked through the spring to go over their options to partner to provide the service before finalizing the plans for the fall last week.

“We are very excited to begin this joint venture with Waynesboro Public Schools. Afterschool care for pre-kindergartners is a true need in our community, and we are happy to be able to provide a service to those families,” Waynesboro YMCA Childcare director Rebecca Patton said.

The Y will be working with Waynesboro Public Schools to add value to the program over the next few years so that the afterschool care also serves a school-readiness objective.

“This is a perfect tie-in, and we look forward to working jointly with the teaching staff to support their efforts as well,” said Fife, adding that the Y will also be looking to adding a physical-fitness component to the program to establish early patterns of a healthy lifestyle.

“This is a win-win for the school system, the Y, the families we’ll serve, and the community at-large,” Fife said.

Crowder is looking forward to seeing the partnership take off in the coming years.

“Having the Pre-K program in one building will make this program a great success. We are so pleased to be working with the Waynesboro YMCA – we have similar missions,” Crowder said.
 

YMCA Pre-K Afterschool Childcare

  • $50 registration fee
  • Y Members: $50 per week
  • Non-Members: $55 per week
  • Full time only
  • For full day care when school is out due to holidays, teacher workdays or inclement weather, there will be an additional cost of $15 per day for Y Members and $18 per day for Non-Members. The Y is working with the Department of Social Services to provide tuition assistance and with generous YMCA supporters to provide income-based scholarships.

For more information, contact Rebecca Patton, Childcare Director at 540-943-9622 ext 208.
 

The program will provide:

  • a weekly physical fitness program designed especially for 3- to -5-year-olds
  • educational field trips on full days
  • weekly swimming at the Y
  • daily outdoor play time
  • arts and crafts
  • dedicated homework/tutoring time
  • staff will be working closely with Pre-K teachers to provide educational support where needed

More information at WaynesboroYMCA.com.

Mixed bag in local election results

Story by Chris Graham
freepress2@ntelos.net
 

Tighter-than-expected elections in Waynesboro, and results as expected in Staunton. That was Election Day in the Valley on Tuesday. Read more

It’s endorsement time

Written by Chris Graham
freepress2@ntelos.net
 

Waynesboro is going to head in a new direction after Tuesday’s city elections. Staunton is going to continue on a familiar and proven course. We can say that with certainty as different as the two election cycles have been in the sister cities.
  

Free read from AFPTheMagazine.com.
Read more

Election Guide 2010

Compiled by Chris Graham
freepress2@ntelos.net
  

AFPTheMagazine.com offers up information on the candidates for public office in contested races in Staunton and Waynesboro to be decided on May 4. 
 

Free public service of AFPTheMagazine.com. Read more

Just rearrange the deck chairs

Why are our local school systems going to a job fair when they’re cutting jobs?
 

Story by Chris Graham
freepress2@ntelos.net
  

It seems counterintuitive at first glance – to have a job fair to recruit potential new employees when the economic reality that you’re facing has you considering deep and painful cuts to staff. So when it was brought to my attention that the Waynesboro school system was spending what I was told was more than $3,000 to take part in a teacher-recruitment fair at James Madison University this weekend, yeah, I did a doubletake.

Turns out that the figure cited to me was low – it’s actually going to cost the city school system $5,000 to take part in the Shenandoah Valley Job Fair. It also turns out that Augusta County and Staunton and administrators from school systems in several neighboring localities are going to be there. And all, it seems to me, after looking into the matter, for good reason.

“We experience between a 9 and 15 percent turnover in professional staff each year due to attrition – retirements, relocations, life changes, et cetera. Because this may occur within an unpredictable timeline and varied endorsement areas, we must be certain we maintain an adequate pool of applicants with varied levels of experience, licensure and endorsements,” said Vermell Grant, the assistant superintendent in the central office at Waynesboro Public Schools.

Which is to say, the outside-looking-in wisdom that, OK, you’re having to cut jobs, you have some people retiring, some people moving, so just move people around internally, and you’ve got it all covered, doesn’t work in practice. Read more

Chris Graham: A little here, a little there, and it starts to add up

  
Column by Chris Graham
freepress2@ntelos.net

It’s a cold, hard reality. Waynesboro, like most other communities in the Commonwealth and across the country, is facing pretty severe budget shortfalls, both in the near term and into next year.

Policy moves at the local and state level aren’t making things any easier.

We’ll start in City Hall, which is looking at a $183,000 shortfall in the current fiscal-year budget and a $2.6 million funding gap in the budget for the fiscal year beginning July 1. With the U.S. economy beginning to heat up, posting 6 percent growth in gross domestic product in the fourth quarter of 2009, the glaring hole in the City Hall employee flow chart in the economic-development director position that has been open since August 2008 won’t get the city in a position to take advantage of growth opportunities that are already in the offing. Read more

The AFP Show | Budgets and triggermen

  
Hosted by Chris Graham
freepress2@ntelos.net


 

The AFP Show | Budgets and triggermen (20:21)
[audio:http://media.libsyn.com/media/thenewdominion01/THE_AFP_SHOW_feb._18.mp3]


The Feb. 18 installment of The AFP Show has editor Chris Graham conversing with:
- State Del. Todd Gilbert, R-Woodstock, whose legislative initiative to extend exposure to the death penalty to people who order hits or engage others in murder-for-hire appears to be on its way to falling short in the State Senate.
- Waynesboro City Councilwoman Lorie Smith, who talks about the current-year city budget shortfall and what city leaders will need to do to address service-delivery issues in fiscal-year 2010-2011.
- Waynesboro School Board Chairman Jeremy Taylor, who joins the show to discuss proposed changes in the Local Composite Index that could impact the city school budget.