Friday, April 16, 2021 | Seaside Signal | SeasideSignal.com • A3 Cannon Beach preschool to close By KATIE FRANKOWICZ The Astorian CANNON BEACH — The same day Ashley Nel- son decided 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 fi gure out what to do next. Charis Kids, owned by the Cannon Beach Con- ference Center, is the only local preschool option in the city and one of just a few such programs avail- able across Clatsop County. The main preschool and after-school programs will end June 18. It isn’t clear yet if a summer program 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 cur- riculum Nelson values and the care of well-trained and certifi ed 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 understand why Charis Kids is closing. A letter sent to parents and a sub- sequent conversation with Marc Hagman, the con- ference center’s executive director, left her with only more questions. The letter to parents pro- vides no concrete reason for the preschool’s closure, but Hagman told The Asto- rian a combination of fac- tors — including the coro- navirus pandemic — led to the decision. Stresses and strains The conference center is not in a bad fi nancial 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 center’s leadership has been looking more closely at its overall mission. When conference center leader- ship began reexamining its programs and off erings last year, Charis did not seem to fi t, Hagman said. “If we hadn’t gone through COVID,” he said, “I don’t think we’d be at this point.” The program is expen- sive to run and, given the center’s primary responsi- bilities to conference and retreat guests, “it can’t just be a break-even sort of thing,” Hagman said. But, he added, the deci- sion 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 minimizes their compas- sion and their skill. What we’re doing is not a com- ment or commentary on them. It’s just this is what we need to do at this point.” Hagman said they will look to fi nd other job options within center oper- ations for the teachers and staff of Charis Kids who want to continue at the con- ference center. Since the announce- ment, former teachers have reached out to Hagman and the conference center leadership, asking them to reconsider their decision. Dana Jones, a former employee at the preschool whose children attended the program when they were young, said commu- nities would be left with- out reliable and aff ordable child care if the preschool BUSINESS Directory ELECTRICAL • New Construction • Remodels • Panel Changes & Upgrades • Add Circuits or Lighting CCB #198257 CALL US for your next electrical project! • Generators • Repairs 503-739-7145 Charis Kids A preschool student at Charis Kids colors in a calendar. closes for good. “I understand that COVID has forced busi- nesses to reevaluate, but I don’t understand why you’d take away a min- istry and outreach to our community that provides jobs and meets such a crit- ical 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, sacrifi cing their careers and asking 10-year-old sib- lings to watch their infants because there aren’t enough child care options in our community.” Clatsop County — along with every county in Ore- gon — is considered a child care desert. Many cen- ters and preschools oper- ate with lengthy waitlists. Parents who might want a particular program for their children struggle to fi nd something that fi ts their needs and their budgets. Preschool programs often function as a form of day care for working fami- lies and are touted by edu- cation experts as a key way to prepare young children for kindergarten, as well as establish a foundation for the rest of their school careers. Administrators with the Knappa School District pointed to these benefi ts when they recently announced plans to open a public preschool later this year. But day cares and pre- schools are rarely profi table ventures. Programs often struggle to fi nd and retain qualifi ed staff and keep prices aff ordable for fam- ilies. With the pandemic, centers faced restrictions on how many children they could accommodate and other costs and hurdles. Before the pandemic, Clat- sop County had 12 state certifi ed child care centers. After shutting down tempo- rarily last spring because of the pandemic, only a hand- ful 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 hos- pital nurse administrator, relies on Charis Kids for child care but also appre- ciates the education 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: “Mov- ing forward, it will severely impact working families that would be the ones growing this community.” ‘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 pre- viously let administrators know she would be leav- ing the program to move to Seattle. The pandemic and the layoff hastened her timeline. Now she feels “shocked, saddened and sick.” She respects Hagman and knows it was a diffi - cult decision, but she hopes the conference center will reconsider. “We got so much feed- back that we were meet- ing 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 everybody could come.” During Corbin’s time at Charis Kids, the preschool served students from Asto- ria to Nehalem. It had also adjusted operations to make it through diffi cult years. Nelson wishes the com- munity had a chance to work with the conference center to fi gure 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?” 712 S. Holladay Dr. • Seaside, OR Monday-Friday 8 am -5 pm www.jjelectricservice.com FLOORING CCB# 205283 Luxury vinyl planks and tile. you walk on our reputation Flooring Installation 3470 Hwy 101 Suite 102 • Gearhart, Oregon 503.739.7577 • carpetcornergearhart.com LANDSCAPING YARD DEBRIS DROP-OFF (no scotch broom) • La urelwood Compos t • S oil A mend ments • Pla nting Ma cMix • Mulch 503-717-1454 3 4 1 5 4 HIGHW AY 2 6 SE ASIDE , O R Laurelwood Farm ELECTRICAL • Repairs • Generator installation & servicing • New construction • Remodels Serving the North Oregon Coast since 1950! 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