The BulleTin • Monday, april 12, 2021 A3 TODAY LOCAL, STATE & REGION ‘Shocked, saddened and sick’ A Cannon Beach preschool is closing, but parents and former teachers question why BY KATIE FRANKOWICZ The Astorian C ANNON BEACH — The same day Ashley Nelson de- cided to accept a full-time job, the preschool where her children attended an after-school program announced it would close in June. Nelson, previously a stay-at-home mom, had been counting on Charis Kids in Cannon Beach as she dipped back into the workforce. Now, she and more than 20 other families are trying to figure out what to do next. Charis Kids, owned by the Can- non Beach Conference Center, is the only local preschool option in the city and one of just a few such programs available across Clatsop County. The main preschool and af- ter-school programs will end June 18. It isn’t clear yet if a summer pro- gram will go ahead as planned. Charis Kids is a long-standing community institution with an excel- lent reputation, Nelson said. When it closes, her children will not only miss out on a faith-based curriculum Nelson values and the care of well- trained and certified teachers, they will also lose the community that had formed around the preschool. “It’s an incredible hole,” Nelson said. Like other parents and former teachers who heard the news, Nelson said she is in shock. She doesn’t un- derstand why Charis Kids is closing. A letter sent to parents and a subsequent conversation with Marc Hagman, the conference center’s executive director, left her with only more questions. The letter to parents provides no concrete reason for the preschool’s closure, but Hagman told The Asto- rian a combination of factors — in- cluding the coronavirus pandemic — led to the decision. Stresses and strains The conference center is not in a bad financial state, and the closure of Charis Kids is not an indicator of tough times ahead, he said. Still, the pandemic brought certain stresses and strains, especially when it came to operating a preschool. The cen- ter’s leadership has been looking more closely at its overall mission. When conference center leadership began reexamining its programs and offerings last year, Charis did not seem to fit, Hagman said. “If we hadn’t gone through COVID,” he said, “I don’t think we’d be at this point.” The program is expensive to run and, given the center’s primary re- sponsibilities to conference and re- treat guests, “it can’t just be a break- even sort of thing,” Hagman said. But, he added, the decision to close the preschool was not easy. “Charis Kids has had great impact in the work they do,” Hagman said. “Not just in reaching kids, but their families and their extended families, too. For me, there’s nothing that mini- mizes their compassion and their skill. What we’re doing is not a comment or commentary on them. It’s just this is what we need to do at this point.” Hagman said they will look to find Charis Kids/The Astorian A preschool student colors in a calendar at Charis Kids, the only local preschool in Cannon Beach. “I understand that COVID has forced businesses to reevaluate, but I don’t understand why you’d take away a ministry and outreach to our community that provides jobs and meets such a critical need. As Oregon goes back to work, our community needs child care options. Parents are scrambling, sacrificing their careers and asking 10-year- old siblings to watch their infants because there aren’t enough child care options in our community.” child care but also appreciates the ed- ucation her daughters received. She had been looking forward to sending her third child to the program soon. “For me, it was the amazing light at the end of the tunnel,” she said. The closure will not just impact her, she said: “Moving forward, it will severely impact working families that would be the ones growing this community.” — Dana Jones, a former employee at Charis Kids ‘Shocked, saddened and sick’ Gretchen Corbin taught at the preschool for 13 years before being laid off in March 2020 because of the pandemic. She had previously let administrators know she would be leaving the program to move to Seat- tle. The pandemic and the layoff has- tened her timeline. Now she feels “shocked, saddened and sick.” She respects Hagman and knows it was a difficult decision, but she hopes the conference center will reconsider. “We got so much feedback that we were meeting a crucial need in the community for families of every social and economic level,” she said. “We served them all and we worked with them all to make sure every- body could come.” During Corbin’s time at Charis Kids, the preschool served students from Astoria to Nehalem. It had also adjusted operations to make it through difficult years. Nelson wishes the community had a chance to work with the con- ference center to figure out a way to keep Charis Kids. “If it was a funding issue, why not give the community a chance to help?” she said. “If there was an issue we could have helped you solve, why couldn’t we have been given an opportunity?” other job options within center op- erations for the teachers and staff of Charis Kids who want to continue at the conference center. Since the announcement, former teachers have reached out to Hag- man and the conference center lead- ership, asking them to reconsider their decision. Dana Jones, a former employee at the preschool whose children attended the program when they were young, said communities would be left with- out reliable and affordable child care if the preschool closes for good. “I understand that COVID has forced businesses to reevaluate, but I don’t understand why you’d take away a ministry and outreach to our com- munity that provides jobs and meets such a critical need,” she wrote in a Facebook post addressed to Hagman. “As Oregon goes back to work, our community needs child care options. Parents are scrambling, sacrificing their careers and asking 10-year-old siblings to watch their infants be- cause there aren’t enough child care options in our community.” Clatsop County — along with ev- ery county in Oregon — is consid- ered a child care desert. Many centers and preschools operate with lengthy waitlists. Parents who might want a particular program for their children struggle to find something that fits their needs and their budgets. Preschool programs often func- tion as a form of day care for working families and are touted by education experts as a key way to prepare young children for kindergarten, as well as establish a foundation for the rest of their school careers. Administra- tors with the Knappa School District pointed to these benefits when they recently announced plans to open a public preschool later this year. But day cares and preschools are rarely profitable ventures. Programs often struggle to find and retain qual- ified staff and keep prices affordable for families. With the pandemic, cen- ters faced restrictions on how many children they could accommodate and other costs and hurdles. Before the pandemic, Clatsop County had 12 state certified child care centers. After shutting down temporarily last spring because of the pandemic, only a handful had reopened by July. Which makes Charis Kids even more special to the families who have come to rely on the program. Shelby Gosser, a hospital nurse ad- ministrator, relies on Charis Kids for Today is Monday, April 12, the 102nd day of 2021. There are 263 days left in the year. Today’s Highlight in History: On April 12, 1945, President Franklin D. Roosevelt died of a cerebral hemorrhage in Warm Springs, Georgia, at age 63; he was succeeded by Vice President Harry S. Truman. In 1861, the Civil War began as Confederate forces opened fire on Fort Sumter in South Carolina. In 1877, the catcher’s mask was first used in a baseball game by James Tyng of Harvard in a game against the Lynn Live Oaks. In 1955, the Salk vaccine against polio was declared safe and effective. In 1961, Soviet cosmonaut Yuri Gagarin became the first man to fly in space, orbiting the earth once before making a safe landing. In 1963, civil rights leader Martin Luther King Jr. was arrested and jailed in Birmingham, Alabama, charged with contempt of court and parading without a permit. (During his time behind bars, King wrote his “Letter from Bir- mingham Jail.”) In 1975, singer, dancer and civil rights activist Josephine Baker, 68, died in Paris. In 1988, the U.S. Patent and Trademark Office issued a pat- ent to Harvard University for a genetically engineered mouse, the first time a patent was grant- ed for an animal life form. In 1990, in its first meeting, East Germany’s first democratically elected parliament acknowl- edged responsibility for the Nazi Holocaust, and asked the forgiveness of Jews and others who had suffered. In 2015, Hillary Clinton jumped back into presidential politics, announcing in a video her much-awaited second cam- paign for the White House. Jordan Spieth romped to his first major championship with a record-tying performance at the Masters, shooting an 18-under 270 to become the first wire-to- wire winner of the green jacket since 1976. Ten years ago: Japan ranked its nuclear crisis at the highest pos- sible severity on an international scale — the same level as the 1986 Chernobyl disaster. Five years ago: Actor Anne Jackson, who often appeared onstage with her husband, Eli Wallach, in comedies and clas- sics, died in New York at age 90. One year ago: Christians around the world celebrated Easter Sunday isolated in their homes by the coronavirus. Today’s Birthdays: Actor Jane Withers is 95. Jazz musician Herbie Hancock is 81. Rock singer John Kay (Steppenwolf) is 77. Ac- tor Ed O’Neill is 75. Talk show host David Letterman is 74. Author Scott Turow is 72. R&B singer JD Nicholas (The Commodores) is 69. Singer Pat Travers is 67. Actor Andy Garcia is 65. Country singer Vince Gill is 64. Rock musician Will Sergeant (Echo & the Bunnymen) is 63. Rock singer Art Alexakis (Everclear) is 59. Folk-pop singer Amy Ray (Indigo Girls) is 57. Actor Alicia Coppola is 53. Rock singer Nicholas Hexum (311) is 51. Actor Retta is 51. Actor Shannen Doherty is 50. Rock musician Guy Berryman (Coldplay) is 43. Actor Riley Smith is 43. Actor Claire Danes is 42. Rock singer-musician Brendon Urie (Panic! at the Disco) is 34. Actor Saoirse Ronan is 27. — Associated Press