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Community Perspective: Mirna Estrada

To prevent abuse and neglect, support child care providers

Head Start

Lela Seiler/Courtesy of CCS Early Learning

Students swing on a playground at Meadow Lakes Head Start in Wasilla, Alaska. It closed in 2024 due to funding and staffing challenges.

Laurie Mead, the owner of Kyrie N’ Friends, a licensed child care facility in Soldotna, serves a hot meal for lunch every day. For some kids, she knows that this homemade entrée may be the only hot meal they eat all day. When Mead learns that families in her program are struggling, she sets aside the leftovers for them to take home.

Quality, affordable child care makes society function; parents rely on child care to pursue work and support their families, and businesses rely on the child care sector to ensure a stable workforce.

Laurie Mead, owner of Kyrie ‘N Friends child care, has been in the field of early childcare education for 40-plus years, bringing up six children with her husband in the central peninsula. She is close to finishing her BA in early childhood education and family studies. Laurie blends family and work; she hosts a monthly night out for parents to support families and works with several organizations to advocate for families in Alaska.

Eliza Posner is the director of strategy at ACT, where she focuses on primary prevention initiatives to stop child abuse and neglect before it occurs. She is committed to amplifying the voices of those with lived experience and driving meaningful change through collaboration in her work. Eliza loves partnering with groups across Alaska to advance culturally relevant initiatives that help children, youth and families thrive.

Mirna Estrada is communication’s director of Alaska Children’s Trust.

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