or collaborative team.
The Greater Minnesota Innovation Award was awarded to the City of Luverne
and Kids Rock! Child Care Center in recognition of our collaborative efforts to
address critical workforce and childcare challenges through innovative,
community-driven solutions. This recognition reflects the strength of our
partnerships, the leadership demonstrated by the City and Kids Rock!
throughout the project, and the measurable impact on economic development
and quality of life in our community. It also brings positive statewide visibility to
Luverne and reinforces the importance of investing in childcare as essential for
economic growth.
Here is the link to the Awards Page:
Here is the link to the You Tube Video for the Innovation Award Project:
As part of the Conference, Sammons and McClure were also speakers along
with First Children's Finance and ISG for a facilitated panel discussion about
how the community took action to address a critical infrastructure need for
community growth and business attraction. Together, the panelists highlighted
how collaboration, creativity, and community engagement turned an urgent need
into a lasting economic investment in Luverne’s future. The discussion began
with a recap of the community engagement process that began in 2017 and
involved a number of community meetings to include elected officials, local
businesses, current providers, and parents alike. The urgency came from
parents when local family childcare providers announced they were closing and
other providers were nearing retirement. Additionally, the number of family child
care providers was steadily declining year after year. With limited availability,
especially for infant slots, many parents were left with no options. After the
community meetings, it was identified that the lack of childcare was negatively
affecting many local businesses ability to attract and retain talent. The COVID
period further proved that childcare is essential to workforce development.
While Rock County has proudly been served exclusively by wonderful in-home
family child care providers, there are simply not enough of them. Many working
parents also expressed the desire for center-based care to accommodate
different needs such as extended hours and consistent care over the summer,
holidays, and school breaks. Making the connection between childcare and
economic development, local leaders viewed childcare as essential to
community growth. Furthermore, parents wanted options and a healthy
community would offer both.
After securing the $2.6 million dollar federal grant, the community went to work
on fundraising another $1 million dollars. Of particular interest to the attendees
was how the community raised over $1 million dollars. Sammons shared that
businesses contributed over 60% of all dollars raised and noted the following
contributions:
32 business donors accounted for $756,000