Daycare birmingham al: Locate Child Care | Childcare Resources

Опубликовано: March 1, 2023 в 2:28 pm

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The 5 Best Adult Day Care Services in Birmingham, AL for 2023

There are
8 Adult Day Care Services
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6
in
Birmingham
and
2
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adult day care services
in Birmingham.
On average, consumers rate adult day care in Birmingham
5.0
out of 5 stars.

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Location

Older Adult Day Care

Provides: Adult Day Care

730 – 8th Ave. W., Suite 102, Birmingham, AL 35204

“This is an amazing place to have a family member. It is literally like a family here and the service they provide is one that is unbeatable, especially for the price!! All of the staff is CPR…” More

“This is an amazing place to have a family member. It is literally like a family here and the service they provide is one that is unbeatable, especially for the price!! All of the staff is CPR. ..” More


South Highland Adult Care Center

Provides: Adult Day Care

2035 Highland Ave., Birmingham, AL 35205

“Alzheimer’s is a wicked enemy. A vibrant successful woman stripped of memory now no longer able to speak. An active hiker in her prime her 92 year old body continues. My mother goes daily to the…” More

“Alzheimer’s is a wicked enemy. A vibrant successful woman stripped of memory now no longer able to speak. An active hiker in her prime her 92 year old body continues. My mother goes daily to the…” More


The Lovelady Center

Provides: Adult Day Care

7916 – 2nd Ave. S., Birmingham, AL 35206


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Sunshine Manor

Provides: Adult Day Care

100 Shadow Wood Park, Hoover, AL 35244


    Adult Day Care near Birmingham, AL

    • Hoover
    • Pinson
    • Hayden
    • Oneonta
    • Cullman
    • Eastaboga

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    Adult Day Care near Jefferson County, AL

    • Blount County
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    • Lowndes County
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    More Options Near Birmingham, AL

    • Assisted Living in Huntsville, Alabama
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    Parents frustrated over childcare center cutting hours, CEO says there was no other choice

    BIRMINGHAM, Ala. (WBRC) – Parents across the state are frustrated after learning Ardent Preschool & Daycare will be cutting hours next week.

    The notice went out to families on Thursday, April 21, 2022, stating the new hours would go into affect on Monday.

    Their hours of operation and childcare will end at 4:30 p.m. Monday-Thursday and 3:30 p.m. on Friday. Up until this point, Ardent was open until 6:00 p.m. A 15% cut in hours and starting next month tuition is rising.

    Matt Dixon is the father to 19-month-old triplets enrolled at the center. He says after reading the announcement, he and his wife were shocked.

    “The idea of giving two business days to reconfigure childcare in the middle of a workday is just — I’m at a loss for words for what you actually call that,” said Dixon.

    Finding new childcare solutions is now on the task list for thousands of families across the state. Dixon says the most frustrating part is how last-minute parents were notified.

    “The timing on multiple level could not be much worse,” he said. “Couple weeks notice, a month notice, would have been tricky to navigate. This is borderline impossible.”

    Dixon says his family is looking into other options like a nanny or babysitter, as well as other childcare operations. Unfortunately, because it’s in the middle of the semester, not many are accepting new children at this time.

    “No one saw this coming and no one I’ve interacted with seems to have a great plan on how to deal with this,” said Dixon.

    Several parents told WBRC they are searching for answers from John LaBreche, the CEO of Ardent. He spoke exclusively with us on Friday.

    “We had to make a tough decision about either changing our hours or having to close out classrooms,” explained LaBreche. “Like picking and choosing which classes are going to be totally closed next week.”

    The main reason is because of significant staff shortages and burnout. LaBreche says every location needs five to nine full time staff members right now.

    “My corporate team has been covering classrooms, my wife’s been covering classrooms, I’m covering two-year old classrooms. I did that three days last week.”

    He says many employees are working well over 40 hours to make up for the lack of staff, causing extreme burnout. LaBreche adds that some days, they are getting upwards of ten employees calling out sick, on top of a limited staff.

    Since the announcement, LaBreche says he’s received threats and his staff is dealing with backlash.

    “It’s tough,” he said. “People don’t know the context of what you’re trying to do and how much you care because they don’t see the behind-the-scenes of what’s happening. We’re trying to do the best job we can.”

    The CEO says the new hours are only temporary until they can hire more people and fully train the limited staff they do have. They plan on reevaluating at the end of July.

    He still wants parents and families to know that he understand the frustration, and wishes there was a better solution.

    Parents frustrated by daycare decision to cut back hours

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    Journey to Al Birmingham How Britain’s proletarian capital turned into a nest of jihadists British law enforcement officers figured out where he came from to London. The tracks led to Birmingham – the “Birmingham Caliphate”, as the press dubbed it, which in recent years has become a Mecca for Muslims throughout Europe. How a working-class city and the former capital of the British socialists turned into a refuge for adherents of Islam – Lenta.

    ru understood.

    Drank a beer

    25-year-old Stuart Bailey, a respectable citizen of the United Kingdom, who lives on Hailey Road in Birmingham, whiled away the evening in the company of a friend. Closer to midnight, young people decided to go to the store and buy something to drink. As soon as Stuart opened the door and took a step outside, he immediately recoiled. A black-clad man with a submachine gun in his hands, standing right in front of the door, yelled at him: “Get out, quick!” Friends slammed the doors and rushed to the window.

    “There was a crowd of armed police outside. They were all dressed in black and armed with MP5 submachine guns, one had six magazines with cartridges fastened to his leg, ”Baley later shared his impressions with newspapermen.

    Police escort Muslim women home after raids during raids

    Photo: Darren Staples / Reuters

    year-old Khalid Masood killed four people. The investigation led law enforcement officers to Birmingham, where Massoud and his family have been living in recent months.

    Proletarian capital

    Birmingham, a city in the west of Central England, was known throughout the world during the industrial revolution as one of the centers of technological progress and the labor movement. The white proletarians of Birmingham, unlike others, were distinguished by their unity and readiness to fight for their rights with employers and the police. In 1832, it was the Birmingham workers, under the threat of the outbreak of civil war, that forced the authorities to make concessions and agree to an electoral reform that allowed the large industrial cities to increase their representation in Parliament. The glory of the patrimony of the rebel workers, the stronghold of the Chartists and Laborites and the nest of industrial innovations accompanied Birmingham in subsequent years.

    During the Second World War, the city was heavily bombed, but after the end of the war, a new economic boom began. After the collapse of the empire, a mass of inhabitants of the former colonies poured into Birmingham, mainly from South Asia. The local economy digested everyone and asked for more. The population of the city exceeded one million people, in terms of living standards Birmingham was even ahead of London.

    Everything collapsed in the early 1980s. Britain, like the rest of the Western world, was swept by a wave of recession. In the case of Birmingham, it was aggravated by its specialization: in the post-war decades, London politicians, in an effort to boost the economy of other regions, removed light industry enterprises from it, essentially turning it into a single-industry town focused on engineering. When Margaret Thatcher, in the name of saving the national economy, began to close unprofitable industries, more than 100 thousand people were left without work.

    Birmingham then responded to London with the famous Handsworth riots: cobblestones, Molotov cocktails and even homemade bombs flew at law enforcement officers. Unlike what was happening in other cities – and protests swept all over Britain at that time – in Birmingham, white, black and Asian youth fought in a single formation with the police.

    European Mecca

    But proletarian solidarity is a thing of the past. Over the past decades, the economic face of the city has changed dramatically, and now a key sector in it is the service sector.

    Anti-Muslim demonstration in Birmingham

    Photo: Darren Staples / Reuters

    Today Birmingham is a city split into several large communities. According to the latest data, almost 58 percent of the population is white, 27.5 percent is Asian (more than half of them Pakistani), less than 9 percent is black, mostly from the Caribbean. While demographers are predicting an 8 percent population growth for the city by 2021, the white population is declining: Today, more than half of elementary school students are blacks or Asians.

    The fastest growing community in the city is Muslim, with one in five Birmingham residents practicing Islam. A few years ago, a Fox News commentator even had to apologize for calling Birmingham “a purely Muslim city where representatives of other religions are barred from entering.

    But this error is quite understandable. In the 1990s, refugees from unstable regions, including Somalia, were added to the already large Pakistani and Indian diaspora. In recent years, the Muslim community has been growing rapidly, including due to immigration from other European countries. For many European adherents of Islam, Birmingham has become a new Mecca: in the countries where they live, they are viewed with suspicion after the recent terrorist attacks.

    According to one of these migrants, Alicia Firens, a Belgian by birth who converted to Islam with her Chinese husband, over the past six years even tolerant Belgium has turned into a sharply anti-Muslim country. “We were expecting our first child and did not want him to grow up in an atmosphere of hatred,” she says. “Birmingham is much friendlier as long as you stay within your own neighborhood.” Now neophytes will have no problems with raising a child: wearing a veil and breaks for daily prayers are allowed in local public schools, and after school, children will be able to go to additional education madrasas, where they will study the Koran.

    Alicia and her husband feel at home in Birmingham: five local areas are almost entirely Muslim, in many others they make up 20 percent of the inhabitants. “I feel safe here,” says one of the residents, 20-year-old Sarah Begum, “the other women around dress the same as me, there are a lot of people with dark skin and Muslims around, and people take care of protecting the area.”

    There will be pogroms

    This concern was tested by deeds in August 2011, when riots broke out in England. Starting in the London area of ​​Tottenham, they quickly spread to other cities.

    In Birmingham, more than 800 rioters in balaclavas and with pistols, mostly blacks, attacked primarily Muslim neighborhoods. Mutual hatred has been accumulating for a long time – since the gang war of 2005, when immigrants from the Caribbean converged with Pakistani groups in the struggle for the redistribution of the prostitution and drug markets – and finally spilled onto the streets.

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    The police tried to restrain the attackers, but they weren’t strong enough: as soon as one street was blocked, the rioters changed their route and passed along another. The crowd broke into Pakistani neighborhoods and engaged in robbery: they broke windows, smashed restaurants, dragged everything that came to hand.

    The Muslim community promptly organized detachments of combatants. Soon the first victims appeared – three Pakistanis tried to protect their property, but they were hit by a car – as the investigation showed, the collision was intentional. The city was on the verge of an interracial conflict. “The whole community was armed,” the father of one of the victims, Tariq Jahan, later said. “Young men came to me and said, ‘We want revenge.’”

    Memorial procession in memory of Muslims who died during the pogroms of 2011

    Photo: Mark Makela / Corbis via Getty Images

    The situation was saved only by the arrival of additional police forces in the city and personally by Prime Minister David Cameron, who met with community leaders and managed to extinguish passions. But the problem remains unresolved: unemployment in Birmingham is still above 10 percent, and young people – whether blacks or Asians – have nowhere to go but to the streets.

    It is there, according to the police, that Muslim youth go through the elementary school of the war for the faith. “Many of the guys have been on drugs for a long time, come from single-parent families, face domestic violence,” says Mohammed Ashfaq, head of a local organization that tries to turn youth away from drugs and extremism. “They get into bad company, and around them the gangsters say: come on, boy, join our gang, you will become a cool, real gangsta jihadi.”

    But even children from wealthy families sooner or later receive their portion of Islamist propaganda. This happens most often in educational institutions, where radical preachers freely penetrate. Recently, Birmingham was rocked by a series of scandals when school sermons calling for the killing of infidels leaked onto the Internet. Several Islamist teachers have been fired, but how many are left?

    Stopover on the way of jihad

    More recently, Coventry Road – one of the busiest streets and, at the same time, the residence of the most conservative Birmingham Islamists – was plied by buses of the Al-Muhajiroon organization, headed by preacher Anjem Chhoudary. Prayers blared from the speakers, and members of the organization handed out leaflets to passers-by calling for them to convert to Islam and help the jihad fighters.

    Now Chhoudari is in prison, Al-Muhajirun has been declared a terrorist organization by the British court, but the network spread by the Islamists in Birmingham has not disappeared. In Muslim quarters, where the police do not dare to meddle, it is easy to get lost, and in radical mosques they will always give shelter to those who follow the path of jihad. Fellow believers are not given out here. Many well-known personalities have passed through the underground terrorist network, which the police say exists in Birmingham. Among them are the organizers of the attacks in Paris and Brussels – Abdelhamid Abaud and Mohammed Abrini, the closest friend of Jihadi John Junaid Hussein, and many others who later went to war in Syria, Iraq and Somalia in the name of pure Islam.

    “Jihadists act like mafiosi,” says David Videsette, a former detective with a background in counterterrorism. “They distribute extremist literature through shops, arrange meetings with radical mullahs, and collect money through mosques. Many people still think that terrorism is related to religion, although it has long since become a means of making money.”

    Birmingham Moslems argue that a few black sheep cannot judge the whole flock. Mass actions were held in the city condemning the attack on Westminster, the local community collected a round sum for the victims and the families of the victims. The Birmingham Faith Leaders’ Group even issued a special statement saying: “We ask everyone to understand that these actions are the work of one person, not the entire community. Every day in Birmingham we see examples of creative, productive and mutually beneficial relationships between people of different religions. We must come together, especially in these difficult times.”

    However, Muslim activists themselves acknowledge that there is a problem. The law enforcement officers who carried out the raids in Birmingham were lucky that most of the suspects lived in areas with a mixed population. It would hardly be possible to find ends in purely Muslim ones. “These are places where people can just hide and do what they want,” admits Ashfaq. “If a militant decides to hide, for example, in the Muslim district of Sparkbook, no one will give him away.”

    Wilmar Barrios: Children should develop through football what God has given them.

    The Russian Football Union summed up the results of the third All-Russian festival “Football at school”, which took place in 78 regions of the country until June 10th. Within three months, students of kindergartens and secondary schools held more than two thousand contests, competitions, quizzes and relay races.

    According to the results of the festival, winners were determined in each district in three categories: among kindergartens, schools with less than and more than 300 students.

    Three best educational organizations in Russia have become known : kindergarten No. 36 from Tyumen, Gusarevskaya secondary school of the Azov region (Rostov region) and secondary school No. 10 (Lipetsk region). The winners of the Football at School festival will be awarded sets of football equipment by the RFU.

    Kindergartens and schools have been identified that will receive additional encouragement (balls 3-5 numbers, sports capes, nets, bags for balls, diplomas): 34 preschool organizations, 13 schools with less than 300 children and 24 schools with more than 300 students. All participants were awarded with electronic certificates. The best school in St. Petersburg remains GBOU school No. 14 in the Nevsky district with a rating of 97.4378.

    I will share my own experience. We participate in the festival for the third time, we are happy to perform interesting, live competitions. The format of the festival is most convenient for educational institutions: all tasks can be completed on the basis of your own school or kindergarten. After each event, photo and video reports are uploaded to the sports portal of the Russian movement of schoolchildren sport. rdsh.rf.

    The list of proposed events includes: a culinary competition “Football Gourmet”, a collective visit to a football match, football relay races, a complex of activities “Dad, Mom and I are a football family”, a mini-festival for girls “We are in the game”, a cool cup, a competition of commentators and videos “Our football club”, the challenge “Football at home” and other tasks.

    In general, everything is objective, only the evaluation criterion for photo and video reports raises questions: some schools can find a professional photographer, cameraman and editor, others are content with their own resources and, of course, lose in quality. In my opinion, representatives of the RFU should try to personally come to the finalists as kind expert examiners. Then there will be much fewer questions from the educational institutions and preschool educational institutions that did not win prizes.

    It is still difficult to motivate those who directly implement the project on the ground, that is, school teachers. A physical education teacher has an average of six lessons a day, and not everyone has enough strength, emotions and, most importantly, the desire to devote time to extra-curricular football activities for the same money. This problem is also relevant for St. Petersburg: out of 800 schools, lyceums and gymnasiums, only… 24.

    Unequivocal respect to the RFU for involving former famous football players in the Football at School project. In particular, at the end of June, more than seven hundred children from schools in the Krasnodar Territory played football with the ambassadors of the Russian Football Union – Vladimir Bystrov, Ruslan Pimenov, Maxim Buznikin and Alexei Igonin. Boys and girls from 7 to 15 years old trained and participated in master classes, received prizes and souvenirs from the RFU.

    – A wonderful initiative of the RFU, not only children, but we also received positive emotions, – ex-captain of Zenit Alexey Igonin shares his impressions of the master class, – introducing children to football begins with interest, and it, interest, is activated through communication with people who played for the Russian team. Not all of them will become professional football players, but they will love the game and support their teams for sure. This is the essence of the Football at School project.

    Recall that the project works in five areas: football lessons, football sections in schools, training and support for teachers, the All-Russian Festival “Football at School”, school football league. Last academic year, the festival was held in 58 subjects of the RFU with the participation of 824 educational institutions. Geographic expansion is evident.

    “Children who have chosen football as their sport must believe that everything is possible,” Zenit midfielder Wilmar Barrios advises young football players, “this is the first and most important thing. Of course, you need to train hard, keep in mind that there is someone better than you: smarter, physically stronger, taller – it doesn’t matter. However, you must perfectly understand your capabilities, appreciate and develop what God has given you.