Please Welcome Our New Board Members
Following our January 2018 APM elections, we are pleased to welcome:
Shelby Hubert, NKESC, Director Representative
and
Sandra Halling, Bright Beginnings Early Childhood Center, Staff Representative
KHSA has five open positions on our board. To nominate yourself or someone else, please see our board nomination form and job description.
Oral Health Fact Sheet
Fact sheet: Nearly 1 in 4 kids under age 5 have had tooth decay, which can have lasting consequences. But risk assessments can help put kids on a path to good oral health.
https://s3.amazonaws.com/cdhp/End+Cavities/Fact+Sheet+on+Risk-Based+Care.pdf
Educate your child to be happy
Child Care Aware of Kansas Texting Program
A new resource from Child Care Aware of Kansas. Note that there are different signups for parents/families and for child care providers.
Direct links for the new texting-program resource from Child Care Aware of Kansas.
The KSKIDS Parent Enrollment page is: http://www.ks.childcareaware.org/fill-form-enroll-texting-program-receive-parenting-information-fingertips/
The CCAKS Provider Enrollment page is: http://www.ks.childcareaware.org/fill-form-enroll-texting-program-receive-early-childhood-information-fingertips/
Help us tell Congress to re-authorize CHIP!
CHIP is a bipartisan success story that 9 million children depend on. Families and states need stability, and what they’ve gotten from congressional inaction is uncertainty. Please call your Senators and Representative and ask them to renew CHIP.
For more on how CHIP helps Kansas children and families, please take a look at the Kansas Fact Sheet.
Happy New Year
Thank you to all of our programs, partners, parents, and donors. We look forward to working with in 2018 as we meet a new year of challenges and joy.
Update On CHIP
In one of the final acts of 2017, the Senate approved a short-term spending measure Thursday night to keep federal agencies operating through January 19, 2018, avoiding a government shutdown ahead of a December 22 deadline.
Along with funding the government for nearly a month, the bill also extends funding for CHIP through March 2018. The Senate's vote comes hours after the House also approved the deal.
States can’t rely on limited patchwork funding, and families shouldn't have to worry that their children will be unprotected month to month.
Please contact your Senators and Representative and urge them to adopt a long-term solution and re-authorize CHIP funding for five years.
For more, see:
https://ccf.georgetown.edu/2017/12/22/congress-approves-cr-but-fails-to-pass-long-term-chip-funding/
KHSA Holiday Hours
Parents Worry Congress Won't Fund The Children's Health Insurance Program
Though 9 million kids across the U.S. get their health insurance through CHIP, Congress let the program expire Sept. 30.
Since then, states have been burning through the cash that remains in their CHIP accounts, and parents, doctors and state officials are wondering whether Congress will save what has traditionally been a popular program with strong bipartisan support.
Keeping kids insured doesn't cost much, he says, and it sure pays off.