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Childhaven : ウィキペディア英語版
Childhaven

Childhaven is a King County nonprofit organization that serves children between the ages of one month and five years who have been abused or neglected, or are at risk. The agency runs three programs: Therapeutic Child Care, the state's first program in which children referred by Child Protective Services or Child Welfare Services receive treatment geared toward their particular developmental needs; the Drug-Affected Infant Program, which includes children affected by in-utero or environmental drug use (and requires parents to enroll in outpatient chemical-dependency treatment); and the Crisis Nursery, King County's only 24-hour program to care for children when their parents face a crisis situation.
The agency encompasses three branches: the Broadway Branch in First Hill, the Eli Creekmore Memorial Branch in Burien, and the Patrick L. Gogerty Branch in Auburn. In addition to other in-state organizations, agencies in South Carolina and Calgary have imitated Childhaven's model.〔("History of Childhaven" (Childhaven Web site); retrieved on 17 February 2009. )〕
== History ==
Childhaven was founded in 1909 by the Reverend Mark A. Matthews. Its original name was Seattle Day Nursery, and at the time it was one of only 50 child-care centers in the U.S. The agency's original nursery building was constructed in 1921 in Seattle's First Hill neighborhood; today, the site is home to Childhaven's Broadway Center, which was completed in 2004 thanks to the Capital Campaign, which raised $15.5 million.〔
Seattle Day Nursery's name and purpose transformed following a shift in leadership that started in 1973. That year, Patrick Gogerty became the organization's executive director, and he soon changed its focus, establishing the Therapeutic Child Care Program in 1977 with 10 children. This occurred two years before Washington state made the reporting of child abuse mandatory.〔 Under Gogerty's guidance, the agency began to garner national acclaim; in 1984, it was the subject of a major article in ''Life'' magazine.〔("Gogerty, Patrick" (HistoryLink.org); retrieved on 18 February 2009. )〕 The following year, Seattle Day Nursery was formally renamed Childhaven.
That same year, Congress threatened to cut off Childhaven's funding. Gogerty enlisted the help of his friend Rep. Jim McDermott, who brought the ''Life'' article to a House session and told the story of a specific child the agency had rescued. Persuaded, Congress continued to provide funding for Childhaven's work. Before Gogerty retired in March 1998, ''The Seattle Times'' published an editorial lauding his achievements; its headline was "Fighting for Kids Unable to Fight for Themselves."〔
Childhaven recently celebrated its centennial, and a number of events were planned, including a large-scale luncheon and several open houses.〔(Childhaven Web site (home page); retrieved on 18 February 2009. )〕

抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)
ウィキペディアで「Childhaven」の詳細全文を読む



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