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The Hallie Q. Brown Community Center is celebrating 96 years, looking towards the future
The Hallie Q. Brown Community Center is celebrating 96 years, looking towards the future

CBS News

time17-05-2025

  • General
  • CBS News

The Hallie Q. Brown Community Center is celebrating 96 years, looking towards the future

A St. Paul, Minnesota, organization that's been helping the community for nearly 100 years is under new leadership and looking to expand its role. You'll find the Hallie Q. Brown Community Center in the heart of the Rondo Neighborhood serving as a lighthouse of the community. "We are a 96-year-old organization we are in a new phase of our legacy and our story," said Benny Roberts, Executive Director at Hallie Q. Brown. Roberts is the new executive director of the Hallie Q. Brown Community Center a place he says helped shape him into the leader he is today "This is where I grew up and this is where I was raised, so the center is very important to me," said Roberts. "So, I get to come back home and serve the folks and lead the folks that led me as a kid." Hallie Q. Brown was founded in 1929. It began as a settlement house for African Americans denied services from other agencies and evolved into a muti-service center for all people. "In the early 1900s there was really no place for our community to thrive," said Roberts. "It was built by our community and for our community and it became a staple that people know they can go to for their basic needs to serve the most marginalized in our community our elders, the hungry our children and when we became consistently known as that it was the lighthouse not just for the Black community but for the community as a whole." WCCO Well documented are the activities Hallie Q. Brown did and still does bring to community. From its food shelf to programs for children, teens and our older generation. Arts and culture are also a part of this legacy, including the Penumbra Theatre, now the largest African American Theatre in the country. "They have always pivoted to the needs of the community," said Roberts. "I see us being a communal resource hub." Roberts would like to see a Ramsey County Service center here, right now the closest for people who live in the Rondo and Summit neighborhoods is in Roseville. Roberts also sees the organization expanding to help meet the needs of all who call St. Paul home. "We're in a food desert I see us building a grocery store we've been holding history in this community for almost 100 years, and I see us expressing that into a museum," said Roberts. "I see us having restaurants and coffee shops and shops here where this is a one stop shopping attraction that generates jobs, but it also keeps the community's identity alive." This is a new season for Hallie Q. Brown and Roberts believes it will prove to be just as relevant now as it was when it first opened. "Everyone is looking for an organization an institution that can really be the leader and corral change in our community and people still see Hallie Q. Brown as that lighthouse it's still alive even more today."

St. Paul: Hallie Q. Brown Center shutters what may be state's oldest early learning program
St. Paul: Hallie Q. Brown Center shutters what may be state's oldest early learning program

Yahoo

time11-02-2025

  • General
  • Yahoo

St. Paul: Hallie Q. Brown Center shutters what may be state's oldest early learning program

Benny Roberts has a history with the Hallie Q. Brown Community Center that goes back generations. His grandparents brought home food from its food shelf. His mother attended child care in its early learning program, which he would go on to attend decades later, as well. When Roberts became executive director of the Kent Street community center last July, he was determined to do what he could to keep the 96-year-old early learning program afloat. By his own admission, he failed. 'We tried many different things,' said Roberts, a former mental health worker and college career center director, who opened and closed the community center's doors each day, shoveled snow, helped man the front desk, served as his own executive assistant and oversaw the childcare program himself while searching in vain for a qualified lead teacher. 'We were critically understaffed for a while.' The decision to shutter what's believed by some to be the state's oldest early learning program was not an easy one, but the child care component ceased to exist on Jan. 24. Before that date arrived, Roberts said he called each of the 18 enrolled families himself, back to back in an 'emotionally taxing' single sitting, to deliver the bad news and help them find alternative placements. From its food shelf to its clothing closet and afterschool and senior programs, the work of the community center goes on, but residents of the historically Black neighborhood have lost access to a culturally-sensitive childcare provider at a time when infant and early learning placements are hard to find. Talks are underway around a potential leasing arrangement with a for-profit provider based in North Minneapolis, though the earliest they would open an early learning program at the center would be May 1. Some of the impacted parents were in attendance for a debriefing of sorts on Monday evening, when organizers with the statewide childcare collaborative Kids Count On Us held a roundtable speak-out at Hallie Q. Brown to discuss the state of the childcare industry. Lydia Boerboom, a lead organizer with Kids Count On Us, said her organization was aware of at least six childcare centers across the state that had closed in the past year. Located on the St. Paul campus of St. Catherine University, the 93-year-old St. Kate's Early Childhood Center was permanently shuttered in May. Even prior to the COVID-19 pandemic, Minnesota was short nearly 80,000 child care slots, with many facilities – especially in Greater Minnesota – maintaining months-long waiting lists, according to surveys conducted by the national advocacy organization First Children's Finance. A yawning labor shortage has only exacerbated the problem since then. The state unemployment rate dropped to a historic low of 2.3% in 2022. It now sits around 3.3%. The Hallie Q. Brown roundtable, which was attended by five state lawmakers, also drew nonprofit and for-profit providers, representatives of staffing agencies and others attached to the industry. In quick succession, provider after provider discussed the difficulty of attracting and retaining quality educators. Most in attendance said they wanted to hire licensed teachers with a passion for instruction, not just babysitters pocketing a paycheck, but that required raising their rates and pricing out many middle class families. Even then, said more than one participant, they were unable to offer their workers basic benefits, including healthcare. 'The barriers to hiring are astronomical,' said Angela Kapp, who previously ran four St. Paul-area childcare centers under the banner The Learning Garden. 'I had four staff quit at the same time during COVID, not wanting to get vaccinated and wear masks.' Kapp said she closed her Inver Grove Heights center and is transitioning two other sites in St. Paul to new owners. A fourth site, in Maplewood, is technically run by her daughter, 'but I'm there every day,' she said. 'We don't have enough staff. I can't just walk away.' Understaffing in a childcare environment is no small concern. Last May, weeks before Roberts was hired, three pre-school children ran away from the Hallie Q. Brown Center and found their way to a neighboring school playground. State licensing authorities investigated the incident but did not issue a $1,400 fine until December. At the state level, 'that's how backed up they are,' said Roberts, who described in detail in an open letter to the community how he had searched in vain for the right staff to lead the early learning program. 'What was certain was that people wanted to work. What was also true was that none of them were credentialed.' The center was fined again in January for relying on staff that had not completed a required background study, according to Minnesota Department of Human Services licensing records. Providers at Monday's roundtable also expressed frustration with eligibility requirements for the Minnesota Childcare Assistance Program, which is intended to help families with the cost of childcare but maintains what they described as prohibitive income limits of about $54,300 for a family of three and $64,700 for a family of four. Roundtable participants said those limits locked out many middle-class families unable to afford the cost of care. 'The way this whole system works, it just doesn't work,' said state Rep. Dave Pinto, DFL-St. Paul. 'You would never design this system from scratch.' Providers also bemoaned the cost of opening new centers, which some said ran to about $500,000. That's money difficult to obtain from private lenders, given the industry's tight profit margins. Burnout is high enough that when private equity firms come calling established providers with offers to buy out their small companies, some have a hard time repeatedly saying no, they said. Few saw better days ahead without a major infusion of state or federal dollars. Providers said they were nervous about potential cuts to federal block grant programs supporting state and county childcare assistance, which are up in the air. The Trump administration recently rescinded a memo that would have cut funding to Head Start, another early learning program, but dozens of Head Start programs in 23 states have reported they've been unable to draw down federal funds through their online portal. State Rep. Samakab Hussein, DFL-St. Paul, noted that through its economic development division, the Minnesota Department of Employment and Economic Development made $6.5 million in grants available last year to bolster the state's childcare industry, followed by another $6.5 million this year. The money — up to $300,000 for a single-site project or $600,000 for a multi-site project — can be used in a variety of ways, from direct subsidies and financial incentives to retain workers, to training, licensing assistance and facility improvements. Providers called that an important start, but still not enough to keep more centers from going under. For the Hallie Q. Brown Center, there may yet be a silver lining on the horizon. Since shuttering the early learning program, Roberts said he's been deep in talks with Olu's Beginnings, a for-profit childcare program based in North Minneapolis. Jessica Herod, chief operating officer of Olu's Beginnings, said she was in the process of getting the program licensed to move into the Hallie Q. Brown Center, hopefully by May 1, after some planned renovations. 'We want to bring a quality service back to the building,' Herod said. Local News | Trial for alleged ringleader in $250M Feeding Our Future fraud scheme begins Local News | Opening statements to begin Monday in trial of alleged ringleader of Feeding our Future fraud case Local News | A new, $1.75M playground is coming to Lake Elmo Park Reserve — while the old equipment heads to Ecuador and Uganda Local News | St. Paul nonprofit that highlights historical assets expands to Duluth Local News | Right Track awards St. Paul employers and seeks 2025 interns

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