Smokers tax money to help youth
Danette Goulet
Smokers tax dollars are giving the children of Surf City a boost once
again.
In the latest round of funding from Proposition 10, the 1998
initiative that placed a 50-cent tax on tobacco products sold in
California, three local organizations were awarded more than $300,000 for
programs to help children.
Funds from the proposition are required to be used to support
education, health and child-care programs that promote healthy early
childhood development of children from the prenatal stage to the age of
five.
On Feb. 6 the Children and Families Commission of Orange County, which
was set up for the sole purpose of doling out these tobacco revues,
approved the allocation of more than $9.3 million to fund 54 programs in
the county. Of those 54 programs, 31 are brand new programs and 16 are
established programs, like those funded here in Huntington Beach.
The Boys and Girls Club of Huntington was given $151,000 to fund the
expansion of preschool services, offer parent/teacher training and
purchase classroom materials, said Marissa Espino, a spokeswoman for the
commission. Funding will allow the boys and girls club to hire an on-site
resource coordinator to connect families with essential community
services and provide follow-up support.
The Huntington Beach Community Clinic received a $50,000 grant for a
bilingual social worker and case manager for uninsured low-income mothers
and their newborns. Finally, Collett’s Childrens Home in Huntington Beach
was awarded $135,000 for the Care for Kids program, which will serve
children at risk of homelessness and neglect or mistreatment, Espino
said. So far the commission has doled out $53 million and funded 157
programs in Orange County, all of which benefit young childrenand their
families.
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