Child Care Scholarships Provide Families With Support During Time of Need

Cornell Cooperative Extension Oneida County (CCEOC) has provided a ray of hope through this stressful time by expanding its programming to address the resulting increased demand for child care.

Families across the country are still facing many challenges from the COVID-19 outbreak. The pandemic forced child care centers to limit their intake, leaving many families in need of assistance without services, and some even closed permanently. Cornell Cooperative Extension Oneida County (CCEOC) has provided a ray of hope through this stressful time by expanding its programming to address the resulting increased demand for child care.

CCEOC provides programming that promotes economic vitality, ecological sustainability and social well-being of children. When staff began experiencing an increased volume of phone calls from households in need of childcare due to COVID-19 closures, it expanded its Child Care Resource/Referral Program (CCR&R), which assists parents with securing daycare opportunities.

“Within a matter of days after the onset of COVID-19 restrictions, families found themselves without care not only for their youngest children, but also for their school-age kids and dependents with special needs,” said Mary Beth McEwen, executive director of CCEOC. “Family and work structures changed immediately, with no time for planning and response by critical support systems such as child care.”

To answer the call, the organization launched the CCR&R COVID-19 Child Care Relief Program – Madison County with the help of a $5,000 grant from the Community Foundation’s Madison County Rural Poverty Fund. The program provides families in crisis with child care scholarships, crisis-focused COVID-19 community education and government relief navigation assistance.

Staff work one-on-one with the child care providers and parents to assess their dependent care needs. They also assist the families with completing circumstance forms, guidance documents and locating agencies, web sites, and open daycare slots. If government relief is not feasible or timely, intermediary scholarships are deployed to assist with child care costs. So far, CCEOC has deployed scholarship assistance to six Madison County families that were unable to obtain government relief funds for child care.

“Many families did not qualify for the forms of government relief being offered, which meant they could not get qualified for child care funding,” said McEwan. “We have worked hard to make sure we are here to help them navigate all avenues of the system.”

From the beginning of the pandemic, the CCEOC has remained connected to the community – from sewing masks for essential workers to voicing thanks to New York farmers in a YouTube video. The organization plans to utilize the CCR&R program to continue to support families through any future obstacles.

About the Madison County Rural Poverty Fund

The Madison County Rural Poverty Fund is an effort to support poverty-related causes in Madison County, where 11% of the population was living below the federal poverty rate in 2017, according to CNY Vitals.

Related Stories

Woman standing
Historias December 9, 2025

Dar a largo plazo: Karin DeLaney

Karin DeLaney, abogada especializada en fideicomisos y sucesiones y derecho de la tercera edad, miembro ...

Blogs October 28, 2025

Qué estamos haciendo | Actualizaciones del personal del CNYCF

Nuestro personal se enorgullece no sólo de servir a nuestra comunidad, sino de forjar activamente ...

Sarah and Nikki headshots
Sin categorizar October 22, 2025

Anuncio de nuevas contrataciones

La Fundación Comunitaria Central de Nueva York ha contratado a Sarah Edlund como Directora de ...

Group of people
Sin categorizar September 16, 2025

Cinco organizaciones locales se gradúan en el Programa de Formación de Líderes

Líderes de cinco grupos locales completaron El Aula de Liderazgo (TLC), una serie de formación ...

Group of people standing in front of a van
Blogs September 4, 2025

La resiliencia viene con una cola que se mueve

Una nueva Unidad Móvil Canina significa perros más sanos, viajes más seguros y más veteranos ...

Publicaciones August 22, 2025

Pago pendiente: Retrasos en la financiación de las organizaciones sin ánimo de lucro de CNY a nivel estatal

Colby Cyrus, CAPM y Frank Ridzi, Ph.D. esbozan nuestro análisis de la frecuencia con que ...

Sin categorizar July 8, 2025

LeadSafeCNY: Un vistazo a nuestras inversiones en los barrios

Un nuevo mapa de calor muestra las inversiones vecinales realizadas hasta ahora a través de ...

Woman standing
Historias December 9, 2025

Dar a largo plazo: Karin DeLaney

Karin DeLaney, abogada especializada en fideicomisos y sucesiones y derecho de la tercera edad, miembro ...

Blogs October 28, 2025

Qué estamos haciendo | Actualizaciones del personal del CNYCF

Nuestro personal se enorgullece no sólo de servir a nuestra comunidad, sino de forjar activamente ...

Sarah and Nikki headshots
Sin categorizar October 22, 2025

Anuncio de nuevas contrataciones

La Fundación Comunitaria Central de Nueva York ha contratado a Sarah Edlund como Directora de ...

Group of people
Sin categorizar September 16, 2025

Cinco organizaciones locales se gradúan en el Programa de Formación de Líderes

Líderes de cinco grupos locales completaron El Aula de Liderazgo (TLC), una serie de formación ...

Group of people standing in front of a van
Blogs September 4, 2025

La resiliencia viene con una cola que se mueve

Una nueva Unidad Móvil Canina significa perros más sanos, viajes más seguros y más veteranos ...

Publicaciones August 22, 2025

Pago pendiente: Retrasos en la financiación de las organizaciones sin ánimo de lucro de CNY a nivel estatal

Colby Cyrus, CAPM y Frank Ridzi, Ph.D. esbozan nuestro análisis de la frecuencia con que ...

Sin categorizar July 8, 2025

LeadSafeCNY: Un vistazo a nuestras inversiones en los barrios

Un nuevo mapa de calor muestra las inversiones vecinales realizadas hasta ahora a través de ...

Ver más