Social services face losing critical funding as cuts loom
Staffing, services at risk as City Council looks at 2009 budget
By Matt Batcheldor | The Olympian
• Published November 12, 2008
Shelan said he didn't know how the money could be replaced.
What's next
•Today: The council will discuss the 2009 preliminary operating budget at 7 p.m. today in council chambers, 900 Plum St. S.E. The meeting was moved from Tuesday night because of the Veterans Day holiday.
•Tuesday: The public can weigh in on the budget at a public hearing scheduled for next week's council meeting. The meeting begins at 7 p.m. in council chambers, and public hearings are supposed to start no later than 8.
"If our capacity is diminished, then I think it will have an impact in terms of downtown Olympia as well," he said.
Olympia Early Learning Center
Steve Olson, executive director of the Olympia Early Learning Center, said $13,000 a year in direct city funding is at risk, as well as money from the city and county distributed through another agency.
That could leave the agency with $38,000 less in funding each year.
"I understand times are tough and tight, but I'm not sure this is the right place to cut," he said. "There must be other places to cut."
The center serves about 140 children a day at locations in downtown Olympia and the city's west-side, and the care for about two-thirds of those children is subsidized, Olson said. If the proposed budget cuts become reality, the organization might have to merge classrooms and be forced to subsidize fewer children, he said.
The center has operated for 41 years, and its downtown location, at State Avenue and Capitol Way, is in a city-owned building that it leases for $1 a year.
Youth Partnership Program
The city-run program gives $50,000 a year to nonprofit organizations "to increase parks, arts or recreation opportunities for youth who live in Olympia," according to the city's Web site. The site says organizations funded in 2008 include Garden Raised Bounty ($13,000), Together ($12,000) and Thurston Community Television ($10,325).
Louise Webb, listed as staff liaison for the program, couldn't be reached for comment Tuesday.
Dispute Resolution Center
For all its 17 years, the Dispute Resolution of Thurston County has received funding from the city. Now it faces a funding cut of about $5,000 from the city and $9,400 from Thurston County.
"That would leave a $15,000 hole in our '09 budget," said Evan Ferber, the center's director. The center's 2008 budget is about $250,000.
The organization has six part-time, paid staff members who manage the center and train volunteers who staff phone lines and mediate disputes, Ferber said. Its work includes mediating disputes with divorcing parents who have children as well as neighborhood issues. The organization has more than 100 volunteers and serves Thurston County and the Shelton area, he said.
The center might have to increase service fees to make up the difference, but Ferber is leery.
"We can't raise the fees a lot," he said. "Just ethically, we want to make these services affordable and accessible."
@Nyx.CommentBody@