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Day-care centre shares success

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Published: March 21, 2002

It is no longer just toddlers who are helped by the Lakeview Children’s

Centre in western Manitoba.

Teens, parents and other day-care centres are also benefitting from the

programs of the 12-year-old centre in Langruth, Man.

Centre co-ordinator Jane Wilson said it is trying out new child-care

programs in six other farming communities in which it is active.

Besides handling up to 100 children and 19 full and part-time staff,

the centre has some special projects.

In McCreary, with the assistance of a local RCMP officer, a committee

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is planning a youth program to work with that community’s 60 children

aged 10-16. In McGregor and Amaranth, groups of mothers get together

weekly for support and discussion of parental issues.

The Langruth centre has set up a resource area offering playpens,

books, games and eight theme boxes to lend for free to parents and

other nursery schools.

The centre is setting up its own website with grant money. The province

recently named Lakeview a centre of excellence for child care.

Wilson said the child-care centres are also getting ready for another

seeding season by planning to be open for extended hours, as late as 10

p.m.

“It’s a given in our program when things start to farm up.”

Wilson said she does not know why Lakeview succeeds and other rural day

cares don’t, but she has decided to document the centre’s history –

“mistakes and good things” – so other communities can learn how to do

it.

She also credits her board of directors for its hard work, ideas and

dedication. The board covers all the communities served and includes

two or three people from each town.

“It’s a good model for rural areas. Everyone has representation but no

one gets burned out.”

About the author

Diane Rogers

Saskatoon newsroom

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