Archive for September, 2007

Hispanic people feel new hostility

Immigrant debate feeds anger, fear

Miguel Munoz was standing in a drug store parking lot having a conversation in Spanish when a pickup pulled up beside him. The driver shouted curses, shook his fist and called Munoz an “illegal alien.”

“He said, ‘When you come to my country, you need to speak English,’ ” said Munoz, a Durham lawyer who immigrated legally from Mexico 17 years ago.

In that parking lot, Munoz said, he realized for the first time that some people see him as an invader in the place he calls home.

As furor over immigration rises across the nation, many Hispanics say they are increasingly the targets of hostility in a state where they once felt welcome.

Some commentators and politicians concerned about illegal immigration routinely associate illegal immigrants with violence, disease and dependence on public resources. Immigrants and their advocates say the prevalence of such ideas has changed the way many Americans view Hispanic immigrants — legal or illegal.

Discrimination complaints are increasing, and some Hispanic nonprofits are struggling to maintain their funding as major benefactors become more cautious about Hispanic causes. Hispanics say they feel that even public officials and law enforcement officers are inclined to see them in a negative light or treat them poorly.

This month, a state Highway Patrol trooper resigned after he was accused of abducting Hispanic women and making sexual advances toward them. One woman said he threatened her husband with immigration arrest. In May, it was revealed that a federal, Raleigh-based Drug Enforcement Administration agent humiliated a Hispanic suspect, who was a legal immigrant, by forcing him to pose for a picture wearing a sombrero and holding a Mexican flag.

Munoz, the lawyer, said he got no response from police when he reported being harassed in the parking lot. He said an officer told him the man’s actions were not a crime.

“I was shaking that night,” said Munoz, 41. “I have children who look Hispanic. I was afraid for what can happen to them.”

Assumptions change

Ivan Parra, an immigrant from Colombia who heads the N.C. Latino Coalition in Durham, said he has watched stereotypes of Hispanics take a bad turn.

“A few years ago, there was the general idea that these folks are hardworking, they contribute to the economy, they go to church,” Parra said.

Now, he said, the stereotype is of people who skirt taxes or belong to gangs. Parra said he does not deny that some immigrants commit crimes or cheat the system, but he said the actions of a few are beginning to color the perception of an entire group.

Marco Guerra, 48, a Raleigh auto mechanic who immigrated legally from Chile, said he was eating at a restaurant bar a few weeks ago when a man sat next to him.

“Right up front, he asked me, ‘Are you a wetback?’ ” Guerra said.

A few weeks earlier, Guerra said, he walked into a public restroom. A young boy who was inside screamed, “Daddy, it’s a Mexican, it’s a Mexican,” Guerra said.

“People look at me, and they just assume that I’m illegal,” said Guerra, a U.S. citizen who left Chile in 1981.

Guerra said he has always suspected that people made assumptions about him because of his brown skin and accented English. Now, he said, people are giving voice to their assumptions.

Leonor Clavijo, a spokesperson for El Centro Hispano in Durham, said discrimination complaints used to be rare. Now, her group gets about one a week. She said she hears stories of disputes between neighbors — about the placement of trash cans or other mundane issues — that escalate into anti-immigrant slurs.

Read More: News & Observer

Show kids nature’s wonders

Museum hopes prodding parents will pry children from TV

Taking the kids outside.

It’s like eating healthy or voting.

You should do it. But do you?

If you’re the average mom and dad, you probably don’t.

So say environmentalists and nature educators who think a little prodding might induce parents and others into some outdoor exploration with the children.

They’re signing on to Take a Child Outside Week, an inaugural event that is growing faster than its founder in Raleigh thought possible.

“I honestly thought this was going to be a little North Carolina-focused pilot year,” said Liz Baird, director of school programs for the N.C. Museum of Natural Sciences. “It’s just taken off like hotcakes.”

More than 70 partners across North America have signed on for the week, which runs Monday through Sunday.

It is centered on a Web site, takeachildoutside.org. Here, adults sign in and check a box that says, “I agree to take a child outside to explore the natural world at least once during national ‘Take a Child Outside Week.’ ”

And then, once this outing is completed, the site allows adults and children to document the experience online.

Instead of building forts and catching crayfish after school, Baird and others say children today live highly structured lives with soccer at 4 p.m. and homework, video games and TV until bedtime.

Free play outside in nature does not translate directly into a multiple-choice answer on a test and is no longer valued, they fear. Children are missing out.

“Parents feel like if you just let your kid run around outdoors, you’re not doing what you need to do to get your child into the best college,” Baird said. “The skills and experiences and knowledge that you learn when you’re outdoors are really the skills that you need when you get out in the real world. You learn how to solve problems. You learn how to be observant. All your senses come alive.”

Their rallying cry is fueled by a two-year-old book by Richard Louv that warns about children with “nature-deficit disorder” and statistics that show child obesity is getting worse.

They worry that children who don’t spend time outside won’t develop a connection to nature and appreciate it as adults.

“If today’s kids don’t have a sense of that connection to the natural world, they’re less likely to protect it when they get older,” Baird said.

Spotty attendance

Locally, the concern is buoyed by lagging participation in nature programs.

This week, the staff at Hemlock Bluffs Nature Preserve in Cary canceled some programs because of lack of interest. The park serves about 4,500 people a year in programs but has room for as many as 3,000 more.

“When you think about how large a population Cary has and that each of our programs has a maximum group size of 10 and a lot of those aren’t filled, it’s kind of sad,” said Lisa Plante, program specialist at the park.

School classes, homeschool groups and Boy and Girl Scouts still fill nature education programs at some area parks, though school visits have dropped off at others, including at Hemlock Bluffs.

But the participation in public programs, the kinds that parents sign their children up for, are mixed. Sometimes they’re full, local educators say. Often they’re almost empty.

D’Nise Hefner has an idea why it is happening.

Hefner, the educational program director at Blue Jay Point County Park in Wake County, recently mailed a survey to parents with children roughly 9 to 12 years old to find out why they were leaving the park’s programs. The No. 1 reason was a busy family schedule.

Blue Jay Point also is seeing a decrease in programs geared toward families with children ages 5 and up, Hefner said.

Read More: News & Observer

Program offers a chance to learn from and assist the young

RALEIGH – In the gymnasium at the Garner Road Family YMCA on Saturday morning, black men urged their younger counterparts to tell them about the obstacles they face.

Organizers said the conversations would give the older men more insight into what young black men are dealing with in today’s society — and what was needed to help them.

“We want to show compassion,” said David Prince, a program director for Food and Nutrition Services, part of the N.C. Division of Social Services. “We want them to know that we’re here. We want to spend time with them. The goal is we want to prevent them from building up the jails.”

The program is affiliated with the Triangle High Five, a regional consortium with the goal of getting 100 percent of area high school students to graduate. About 40 men sat and listened to nearly 100 boys and young men talk about barriers to success, including low expectations from others and a lack of role models.

One of the organizers is Orage Quarles III, president and publisher of The News & Observer.

The group now will try to address several of the concerns aired by the young men. Some mentors also suggested assuring the young people that the meeting would not be a one-time thing.

“They need to have that contact so they don’t feel like the ball’s being dropped,” said William Stubbs, an administrative intern at Reedy Creek Middle School, where he is a sixth-grade assistant principal.

Several initiatives to mentor young people have popped up recently in Raleigh. Phase II, a personal training company, is starting one in conjunction with the Raleigh Boys Club and St. Augustine’s College. The program — incorporating fitness, academics, community service and religion — will benefit black males ages 11 to 13.

During his swearing-in ceremony last week, Raleigh Police Chief Harry Dolan said he would like to see more officers mentoring at-risk youngsters in the city.

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GARNER – A police investigation concluded that a school resource officer acted appropriately when he used a Taser stun gun on a 16-year-old student Monday while breaking up a fight at Garner High School.The Garner police officer, Derrick McCarter, was not disciplined after police talked with teachers and reviewed a video of the fight, Sgt. Joe Binns, a Garner police spokesman said Wednesday.

The student, Marcus Xavier Bridges, of 5404 Holland Farms Way in Raleigh was transported to WakeMed after the incident.

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Water restrictions in Triangle

All forms of outside watering are prohibited on Mondays, Thursdays and Fridays. Watering on all other days will depend on your method and whether you have an even or odd address. Car and pressure washing are permitted on Saturday and Sunday only. The fines for breaking the rules are $200 for the first violation and $1,000 for the second. A third violation will result in your water being shut off. The rules also apply to residents of Garner, Knightdale, Rolesville, Wake Forest, Wendell and Zebulon. For more information, visit www.raleigh-nc.org.

CARY

Odd-numbered addresses can water Tuesday, Thursday and Saturday. Even-numbered addresses can water Wednesday, Friday and Sunday. Watering by hand (with cans, wands, hand-held hoses) is allowed any day. For more information, visit www.townofcary.org.

JOHNSTON COUNTY

No irrigation on Mondays. Odd-numbered addresses can water Tuesdays, Thursdays and Saturdays. Even-numbered addresses can water Wednesdays, Fridays and Sundays. For more information, visit www.co.johnston.nc.us.

CHAPEL HILL AND CARRBORO

Spray irrigation is permitted at odd-numbered addresses on Tuesdays, Thursdays and Saturdays and at even-numbered addresses on Wednesdays, Fridays and Sundays. Irrigation can take place only from 8 p.m. to 9 a.m. For more information, visit www.owasa.org.

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Town plans cleanup on Saturday

GARNER – The town is hosting a litter pickup Saturday.The public is invited to participate. Registration will begin at 8:30 a.m. at the large shelter at Lake Benson Park.

Volunteers will be provided gloves, vests and bags. The town’s public works department will pick up all the bags afterward. Every participant will receive a T-shirt. For more information or to sign up, contact Maggie O’Neill at moneill@garnernc.gov or 772-4688.

SOURCE: News & Observer

RALEIGH – Willie Bryant and tap water used to be inseparable.”I used to drink eight to 10 glasses a day and brag about it,” Bryant said this week.

But earlier this year Bryant noticed that the water in his Southeast Raleigh home had started to taste funny and have black flakes in it.

He called the city.

On May 3 a city worker visited Bryant’s house and took samples of his tap water. While Bryant, 86, waited to hear back from the city, he became convinced that reclaimed water intended for lawns was coming out of his faucets.

When he still had not heard back from the city by August, Bryant called again. On Aug. 3 another city official visited Bryant’s home and flushed his pipes, but took no samples.

“They never did give any kind of report on it,” Bryant said this week. “I don’t drink the water anymore. I drink bottled water.”

On Thursday, Greg Kearns, a chemist with the city, confirmed to a reporter that Bryant’s water had tested negative for total coliform bacteria and E. coli.

Kearns said it’s the city’s policy to deliver the results of a water test in the mail, and he promised to get Bryant a copy by the end of next week

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For Cary, it’s about growth

Ernie McAlister and Harold Weinbrecht both acknowledge that Cary is continuing to grow. The difference is in how the two mayoral candidates feel about it.For McAlister, a retired banker seeking his second term as mayor, growth provides the money that is needed to reinvigorate Cary’s finances. He says tax revenue was at a standstill, even while debt was looming, when he took office four years ago.

But McAlister, 50, said he learned the importance of growth even before that — as the banking industry shuffled him through dying North Carolina factory towns, giving him “an appreciation for a strong and healthy local economy.”

What McAlister sees as organized investment, Weinbrecht views as an “unbridled” sprawl of new development congesting Cary’s roads and schools.

These philosophical differences could well determine Cary’s leadership for the next four years.

Weinbrecht has aligned himself with groups that have become both organized and vocal: DavisAndHighHouse.org is supporting Weinbrecht’s challenge for the mayor’s seat. The group formed in opposition to what it says is “overdevelopment” in that area.

McAlister’s supporters have called groups like DavisandHighHouse.org a “small vocal minority” that wants to derail progress McAlister has made following a prior administration that severely limited growth. Cary is still feeling the negative effects of slowed revenue, he and his supporter say.

McAlister said he feels that Cary has handled growth well in the last four years through attention to priorities such as road improvement projects. He said more than $80 million has been shuttled to road projects in the last four years.

For Weinbrecht, feelings that the town’s booming growth was not being handled well is what prompted him to run for mayor. He served in a council at-large seat from 1999 to 2003 before losing a bid for a second term.

“People expect growth and they expect change but they don’t want the town to lose its character,” said Weinbrecht, a 51-year-old programmer at SAS Institute.

Weinbrecht said he thinks that the town is trying to push for development that would “urbanize” Cary — multistory buildings, dense housing and large retail developments that create traffic congestion and other problems. Cary has long attracted people because of its upscale single-family neighborhoods, he said. In other words, he said, some people like suburbia.

One thing that Weinbrecht and McAlister agree on is that one of Cary’s ways for organizing future growth — the use of mixed-use overlay districts — needs to be re-examined.

Created in 2003, mixed-use overlay districts are a zoning tool meant to allow for urbanized mixes of residential, office and retail at key intersections around town. But use of the districts, which are placed on top of the current zoning, has sparked controversy during recent development proposals.

Read More: News & Observer

HOW TO START YOUR OWN DAY CARE CENTER

There’s a definite need for day care centers as more and more mothers of pre-school age children are forced to find jobs outside the home. This is due in part to the current economy, and unfortunately, to the high divorce rate, which means mothers who

might ordinarily stay at home and care for their own children must seek income to help make ends meet.

Many experts expect the demand to increase through the turn of the century, and the popularity of this type of business to continue growing from there. They base their forecasts on the fact that more and more young parents have happy memories of the

time they spent in day care centers, and the learning experiences they enjoyed. And again, there is the continuing need or desire of young mothers to work outside the home.

Profitable day care centers are much more than glorified baby-sitting services. Social researchers have found that the most important years in a child’s development are those from one to six. Thus, the exposure to the world in which he lives, the in struction he receives, and the habits he forms during those years, definitely affect his ability to learn and properly ad just as he progresses on through his years of formal education.

For mothers of today – usually better educated than their mothers – are more aware of these factors and wanting the best for their children, are demanding the structured pre-school education and learning stimulation offered by modern day care centers. This is an honest desire of the mothers of pre-school age children – even those who aren’t forced to work outside the home.

Another thing in your favor: Even though there seems to be a trend for many large companies to finance and operate day care centers for their employees in or close by their factories or office buildings, studies show that most working parents prefer to leave their children closer to home than where they work. Thus, privately operated day care centers in residential neighborhood areas should not be worried too much about competition from the few company operated day care centers.

The first step toward start-up of a profitable day care center is to understand what makes them profitable.

There are a lot of day care centers operating with full enrollments of 35 to 65 children, but just barely breaking even. This is generally the result of regulations imposed by the state government, causing exorbitant overhead costs of operation. Basically, you’ll need facilities to handle 150 to 200 children in order to realize annual profits in the “before taxes” bracket of $100,000.

Check with your state and local government regulatory agencies. Many states require day care centers to provide a minimum area per child, both inside and outside the building, plus at least one hot meal per day. A licensed teacher for every 15 to 20 children, and even a licensed nurse on the premises may be required. Be sure to know the regulations in your area, and then design your business plan to meet these regulations.

Actually, you can begin by operating a baby-sitting service, by learning and expanding from your profits, and of course, through the long-term benefits of establishing a quality image. In fact, we recommend that you do start small – with a baby sitting service – and build upon your progressive successes. Unless, of course, you have half a million dollars to invest.

Once you’re beyond the baby-sitting stage, out of your home and backyard, beginning to build a real day care facility, you might try locating in your church or one of your area’s civic club facilities. Also, you should check out the possibilities of renting or buying a vacant house. A large ranch-style home with a large backyard would probably suit your needs at this stage. But be sure you have zoning approval from your city council before signing a rent lease and finalizing your plans.

You might find, if you have your business plan in order, that a church or labor union will sponsor your business, or even offer financial backing. Arranging some sort of partnership or sponsorship agreement with an established local organization will solve a lot of problems for you, not only in the area of space but in assistance with start-up costs and city-father approval.

Incidentally, a day care center is perhaps the ideal business for absentee ownership or a group of professional investors. Keep this fact in mind as you organize your plan and seek financing. See our business report, How To Raise Money For Starting Your Own

Business.

Generally, a “shoestring entrepreneur” in this business will do very well to locate in a vacant convenience store, or even a vacant grocery store in a larger shopping center. The zoning will be in your favor, plus you’ll have adequate parking space, and less expense in partitioning or remodeling the building to suit your needs.

Ideally, your day care center should be located on a main thoroughfare, with the building set back from the street. You should be on the right hand side of the street as the traffic heads towards the major business or industrial areas of your community. In larger metropolitan areas, this would be on the city-side of the “bedroom” communities. In smaller communities, you can locate just about anywhere except in the downtown area.

If at all possible, you should plan your facility similar to a hospital or motel entrance. This would be a driveway from the street to your door, usually under a covered drive-thru, with the driveway continuing back out to the street. Your long-term parking space would then be located in the center of the “U” or between the driveway and the street. You want to strive for the convenience for the parent in being able to drive right up to your door. She can drop off the child with only a few steps into your facility and easy access back onto the main thoroughfare.

Depending on your city sign ordinances and your finances, go all out with your sign. Advertise the name of your day care center, the hours you’re open, whether you accept drop-ins, overnighters, or weekenders, and of course, your phone number .

The sign makers and advertising people may strongly advise you against so much wording on your sign, but in this instance, don’t listen to them. Your sign should state all essential information, and serve to convince passers-by that you can handle their child-

care problems whenever the need arises.

If you initially locate in, or through the sponsorship of a church or labor union, these people can assist you tremendously by including a mention of your services in their membership bulletins, and by passing out circulars or flyers.

You’ll need to decide on your regular day care hours. Generally, these are from 6 a.m. through 6 p.m. You’ll also need to decide whether you want to offer breakfast for the children. If so, you’ll have to plan for a cook and food supplies for morning meals. We’ll discuss kitchen facilities and kitchen help later, but the first decision must be if you will include breakfast. You’ll already be set up with kitchen facilities and a cook because you will be serving a noon meal. If you do decide to offer breakfast for those parents not wanting to feed their children at home, you’ll be able to add $8 to $12 per week to their billing. By buying your food supplies in bulk, you’ll probably be able to realize some savings in overall food costs.

Mid-morning and mid-afternoon snacks are required in some states, but even where they’re not required, they are pretty much standard fare in most day care centers. Fresh fruit, cookies, and juice are the usual snack foods served in most day care centers.

As mentioned earlier, you’ll definitely be providing a hot meal for the children at noon. This entails a cook, dishes, planned menus, food supplies in bulk, and perhaps even small size table and chairs. You’ll also have to have kitchen help and facilities for washing the dishes.

These are just some of the important overhead costs you must plan for, and of course you will work to keep them as low as possible. As you should know by now, the greater your overhead, the more children you’re going to have to take in, and the more

children you take in, the greater your space requirements.

All profitable day care centers operate according to planned routines. The day is broken down into one-hour segments, with pre-planned curriculam, much the same as classes at a public school.

A typical day begins with a play period from whenever the children arrive until about 9 o’clock. For this, you’ll need indoor sand boxes, toys and perhaps a family-sized television set. From 9 to 10, the children are separated into groups – generally by ages – and you hold a reading or story-telling session. The mid-morning snack time is scheduled sometime between 10 to 11. For the younger children, this might include a mid-morning nap. After snack time, a learning session is usually held. Typically, this is the time when guests are invited in to speak or entertain the children.

Work with your Chamber of Commerce, civic clubs, and city administration for guests. Children will especially enjoy visits by policemen, firemen and others who talk to them about citizenship, show films, and teach them about the things they do in the community.

You can also get upperclassmen at your local colleges to visit and demonstrate such things as drawing, working with clay, building with wood, making things out of paper, and hundreds of other talents or skills they might be learning. The important

thing is to bring “outsiders” in to talk to the kids about what goes on in their world.

Noon to 1 o’clock is generally lunch time, and from 1 until 2 is another learning session. During this afternoon learning session, you might offer the rudiments of reading, writing and arithmetic. These teaching chores can be handled by college students studying to be teachers, retired teachers, or unemployed persons with teaching certificates. It’s not so much a session to teach proficiency as a time to stimulate interest in formal education. The basic goal of most day care centers is to instill within each child a desire to learn more about the world in which he lives. Thus, each child should be full of plans for “when I get to be six years old and start school, I’m going to…”

About once a week, your afternoon learning session should be a tour or a trip to some place that might be interesting as well as educational for the children. Again, you’re making the idea of learning not only interesting, but an exciting ad venture as well.

These trips can be anything from a walk in your immediate neighborhood to loading all the kids into cars or onto buses and taking them to the zoo. Check it out first, but on the whole, you’ll find most businesses in your area will welcome opportunities to show the children around their offices or factories. The same thing quite naturally applies to your city offices, fire department, police department, and radio or television stations.

On days when you don’t have a trip scheduled, your “learning session” might be a film or program related to nature, particularly animals. The advent of the Video Cassette Recorder has opened endless possibilities in this area. Nap time and snack time will fill a period for younger ones, and books and quiet games will occupy older children who do not take a nap. When the nap period is over, they’re allowed to play until their parents

come by to pick them up.

Whenever possible, you should encourage the children to be outside during play periods. If you have lots of playground equipment, you won’t necessarily always have to have organized games, but you will have to have a playground supervisor – someone

to watch the children and see that they don’t get hurt as they play. You can hire part-time help for this chore, perhaps from the local colleges, for minimum wage. If your city ordinances do not cover the specific age requirements of a playground supervisor, you might be able to hire students from your neighborhood high school. Select all the people you hire relative to their affinity with children and their dependability. Be aware of today’s climate of extreme concern in protecting children in day care situations.

Your playground will require a fenced-in area. Drive around and look at the playground equipment in the playyards of your public schools and at day care centers in your area. You should have the basic sandboxes, swings, slides and jungle gyms but in

this area you can be creative and original, provided your equipment meets safety standards.

Some states require that you have a registered nurse on the premises, but generally, the main things needed are medical information from the parents and a written procedure to follow in case of accident or illness. Basically, when a child is injured

or be comes ill, you should take him to the nearest medical center, while another staff person gets in touch with the parents, and explains what happened. If the parent cannot be present at the medical center, all information should be passed on to him/her immediately it is available.

It’s a good idea to have all your helpers indoctrinated with basic Red Cross first aid knowledge, and have a well-equipped first aid kit on the premises. As for any requirements relative to a full-time nurse, you should be able to hire registered nurses

who are either not working or looking for extra income. You might be able to “hire the license” of a registered nurse. You pay a small fee to hang her license in your office, and she agrees to be available to serve your needs when you call.

Most day care centers are currently charging from $35 to $65 per child for a five day week, plus $5 to $10 more for the inclusion of breakfast, with another $l per meal when they serve an evening meal to the child. If you do not receive pay in advance, you can very quickly get “in the red.” We strong suggest setting up your financial structure and clients’ payment schedules with this in mind.

By having your customers pay in advance, you’ll eliminate a lot of bookkeeping chores and time, the problems of collections, and you’ll have operating funds with which to run the business. A point to stress when asking for payment by the month, in advance,

is that because monthly payments are based on only four weeks of day care, they’ll be getting a week of free service every three months.

Every profitable day care center requires a sharp manager or director. This person might be yourself, or someone you hire for the job. Regardless, this person will be the key to your success. The director should have an empathy with people, be an excellent judge of people, be sales oriented, and have an outgoing personality. As much as anything else, this person must have the ability to listen to, and really hear what other people are saying

without the influence of preconceived opinions, or making snap decisions. This person has to have the success of your business in mind at all times, which means building and maintaining an impeccable reputation.

Your director will be responsible for the hiring and supervision of your other help and the budgeting, scheduling and overall day-to-day operation of the business. It is imperative to the success of your business that you have the very best person you can get in this position, regardless of the cost. A good director for a day care center will command a salary equal to teachers in your public schools, plus fringe benefit allowances

such as free enrollment for their children and perhaps medical and dental insurance if you choose to provide group coverage.

When a prospective client calls to ask you about your services, you should explain how you operate, and emphasize your invitation for them to bring their child in so that the two of them can be taken for a tour of your facilities.

Once in the center, your manager or director takes the parent and child on a tour, all the while explaining to parent the advantages of the center’s structured learning and play program as compared with everyday run-of-the-mill baby-sitting services. It’s important to have the child along, because as he sees the other children at play, he will be drawn to them, and this will greatly influence the parent in deciding that your center is the

right place for his child.

After the tour, steer the parent back into your administrative offices and propose enrollment of the child. Begin by asking where the parent works, what hours and if he or she ever has to work overtime. You then ascertain the hours they’ll want to drop off and pick up their child.

Strict procedures are absolutely essential regarding the pick- up of any child. Frightening as it may be to contemplate, we have all read accounts of strangers (or non-custodial parent) kidnapping a child. Printed forms must be provided, and authorization signatures must be compared when anyone other than the legal guardian takes a child from your care. You will learn these requirements from your licensing office. Our advice to you is to follow them meticulously.

You should have a slickly printed, quality brochure showing your rates, your services, an outline of the curriculum, and a statement of your benefit goals for the children.

Check with a legally qualified person about the need for a contract. The parent will probably simply fill out a questionnaire-file card giving address, place of employment,

medical information about the child, and place he or she may be reached in case of emergency.

Most day care centers accept all children between two and six years of age. And there are many nowadays who take infants from six weeks. Of course, your personnel in this situation will be thoroughly oriented in infant care, and you must ascertain if these babies are well when brought in to you. Otherwise, you put yourself in the position of “hospital” care instead of day care.

Generally, children aren’t allowed to bring toys from home. You may want to allow the children to bring their own blanket from home for nap time, but if you allowed toys from home you would be opening “Pandora’s box” of possible problems relating to sharing and ownership. In light of this, you will want a full complement of appropriate toys and play items in your center.

If you decide to include short-term baby-sitting services, a good idea would be to include within the layout of your facilities a small one-bedroom apartment for a live-in or couple. An older retired couple would be ideal, with the husband serving also as maintenance and handy-man.

Around-the-clock baby-sitting services, in addition to your regular day care center, can add tremendous and immediate cash-flow profits to your business, but correspondingly increase your payroll for qualified personnel. Such services would enable the parents to drop their children off in the evening, and leave them around the clock or over the weekend. There will generally be no need for any planned program because these children will be sleeping during most of the time they’re in your care.

As you establish the image and reputation of your day care center, the parents in your area will be much more inclined to leave their children with you for baby-sitting duties. And because you are considered tops in the area of responsibility , you’ll be able to charge the very top rate of the baby-sitting fee structure. Keep current with fees charged by other quality businesses similar to yours.

The demand for unplanned or emergency baby-sitting services is very large. Not too many day care centers are aware of this potential for extra profits yet, but the ones that are find that their incomes can increase by 30 percent or more! We certainly

recommend consideration of this idea for anyone involved in a day care service.

Another area that could mean enhanced profits for you is bus or van pick-up service for the children. Of course, this would increase your operating costs (and consequently your fees) but the convenience of pick-up is gaining in popularity. You’ll need a custodian for indoor and outdoor cleanup, and if you have access to a bus or van, he could be assigned additional duties as the driver. Some day care centers offering pick-up service for their children contract with local transportation services to provide this service. Be certain of the driving experience of your driver if you contract for this transportation service.

Most day care centers open with very little fanfare or advertising. Generally, even without advertising most are reporting 90 percent capacity enrollment within six months.

With grand opening fanfare, and a strong advertising campaign, you should be able to be at 90 percent capacity within your first six weeks. In an area where a severe short age of day care facilities exists, and with the right advertising and promotion, even sooner.

Your first step should be the door-to-door, hand-out distribution of a quality informative brochure. To save on costs, you can hire students attending advertising classes in your area colleges or even a free lance advertising copywriter to help you with the design and writing of this brochure. However, the bottom line should be that you have a good commercial printer do the printing on the best paper you can afford. All of this has to do with the image you’re wanting to create, and the quality of the service the “buyers” feel they’re getting for the prices you are charging. Don’t skimp on your brochure – you’re aiming at people looking for the best place for their children.

You should place at least a two-column by four-inch grand opening display ad in your local newspapers. At the same time, you should place similar ads in the local magazines and other publications catering to the working mother. Send along a group

picture of your staff, and a story about your services with your advertising order. Phone the editors at your local newspapers, radio and TV stations and invite them out to your grand opening.

Be sure to place a “service information” ad in the yellow pages of your telephone directory. This should be the largest size you can afford. And remember that you need to make contact for a yellow page ad well in advance of the release date of the directory.

After your grand opening, and until you attain full capacity, continue to hand out your brochures at the entrances to the office buildings which house companies employing working mothers. Continue to run ads in your local newspaper and online business directory, although these ads

needn’t be quite as large or run as regularly as the grand opening ads. Run an ad in your online internet city guide classifieds for $70.00 a year describing your baby-sitting services.

At your grand opening, offer free refreshments for everyone. Coffee and punch for the adults, with juice for the children, and cookies for everyone. You should have members of your staff circulating among the parents to answer any questions and hand out

brochures about the center.

You can begin small, and expand in stages with your profits. However, you must draw up a long-range plan detailing exactly what you intend to do, and each milestone you’ll have to pass before proceeding to your next goal. In this way, you c an succeed and

attain not only the ultimate business, but also the kind of profits planned at the start.

The basic, and bottom line secret to success with your own day care center will be your ability to hold your costs in line while achieving maximum capacity enrollment. You’ve got the plan, and my best wishes for success!

Garner NC City Guide & Classifieds Ads

START YOUR OWN AUTO TUNE-UP SHOP

This business idea is one of those recession-proof opportunities that can put you on “easy street.” When the economy heats up and inflation increases the cost of living, people become “do-it-yourself” conscious, looking for ways to save money. Whenever the economy falters, people again are searching for methods of saving money and making what they already own last longer.

The marketing principles outlined within this report emphasize the money-making potential of an independent auto tune-up shop in any part of the country. One of the secrets of success in this business is the specialization. No longer do auto owners expect

their neighborhood service station to keep their cars tuned-up and running smoothly.

There are several reasons for the demise of the local “do-it-all” auto mechanic: First, there are very few auto mechanics running service stations anymore. A good journey man auto mechanic can earn much more, without the responsibility, by hiring out to big-time auto dealerships. Most service stations today are simply gas and tire selling outlets operated by the major oil companies who advise you to take your mechanical problems elsewhere for repair. When you do find one with a mechanic on duty, the prices are such that only the very rich can afford them.

There’s also the problem of unethical operators. Although many state legislatures have enacted licensing and consumer protection safety measures, the rip-offs continue. The crux of the problem is that most auto owners do not realize they’ve been taken until after the fact, and then it’s too late. After being taken once or twice, many consumers turn to “do-it-yourself” auto repair until they run into the technology and advanced electronics

of the ignition system on today’s cars. That’s when they’ll be needing your help.

It really doesn’t take any special education or training to set up an independent auto tune-up shop. Any automotive repair experience you may have will help, but a simple knowledge of basic tune-up procedures is all that’s really necessary. In fact, the

important prerequisites will be a strong business sense and an old fashioned “down-home” ability to get along with people.

Remember this fact: In starting and operating this business, it’s not mandatory that you be a qualified auto mechanic; but your success will depend upon your ability to “serve others,” and upon having a genuine desire and ability to do a good job.

This means remembering faces and names; addressing customers by first names as you get to know them; and listening to them; interacting with their problems achievements. The best way to explain the kind of “people empathy” you need for success in any kind of service business is to think of all your customers as close friends.

You can start this business in your garage – and even on a part-time basis. Run an ad in your local paper:

QUICK IN & OUT AUTO TUNE-UPS… Low cost, guaranteed…

We pick up and deliver… Call Jim at 123-4567

Place a similar ad or notice on all the bulletin boards in your area. To drum up business and get the ball rolling, you could even elicit customers via telephone. Simply start calling people out of the phone book. Tell them that your shop is offering a change-of-season special on auto tune-ups – in and out in less than an hour for $20, plus parts, which usually run less than $10, and then ask them if they’d like for you to pick up and

deliver their car this afternoon or evening.

Another way of managing, building, and promoting your business is via the service stations and auto parts stores in your area. Have posters or signs painted, advertising your “quick in-and-out” tune-up service. Take them around to all the service stations that don’t handle auto repairs, and to the auto parts stores, and ask them to put your signs in their windows.

The next thing would be to hand out your business cards wherever you go and to everybody you meet. Give a handful to your friends, and ask them to write their name on the back of the cards and hand them out for you. You could promise them a dollar or two for every customer who brings in a card with their name on it. You’ll be quite pleasantly surprised at how fast your business will grow when you take advantage of these promotional methods.

Still another idea is to have advertising circulars made up. Pay some junior high school students to hand them out at busy shopping centers on weekends, especially after the first cold snap or hot spell of the year. If you live in a large metropolitan area, leave off stacks at your downtown parking lots and get the lot attendants to hand them out as the people pay their parking fees.

You should be able to trade tune-up work for free radio advertising, especially after or during any change in the weather. This kind of advertising should work very well for you, so plan on it and use it at those times when people are most likely to be thinking about a tune-up.

You can set this business up very simply and operate it according to the sophisticated time-saving methods of the highly capitalized franchised operations.

This means an electronic check of the ignition system and scientific diagnosis of the engine. Check with the auto parts and tools distributors in your area. They should be able to steer you the national manufacturers or suppliers of the equipment you need.

Here’s how to buy the equipment: Decide upon a supplier explain your business plan to him. Tell him you want to finance the cost of the equipment through your local bank with him as your co-signer. Get the bank to draw up the papers, make a layout of

your shop and equipment with the help of your supplier, and that’s all there is to it.

After you’ve electronically checked the ignition, the next step in your quick tune-up procedure is to replace all parts that aren’t operating properly. This usually means points, condenser and plugs. In some cases, this may include a new rotor, distributor cap, fuel filter, air cleaner and maybe spark plug wires. Be hesitant to suggest extras beyond the basics until your business is established. Spray some chemical cleaning fluid into and on the carburetor, start the engine, set the timing, make any necessary adjustments – and the job is complete. You charge the customer about $20 for parts, (or according to your cost) plus $35 for labor, and you should be on your way to a good income.

As you become established, and as your customers gain confidence in your work, you’ll be able to suggest and sell them such things as new batteries, battery cables, starters, voltage regulators, alternators and sometimes even generators – when these parts are not working properly and need replacement. It’s important that you don’t sell, or even allow your customers to buy parts from you that are not really needed for continued trouble-

free operation of their vehicles. Another thing: when you do replace a major piece of equipment on a customer’s auto, always schedule the replacement work for a time when you’re not handling regular in-and-out tune-up customers. In other words, you might

schedule the replacement of a generator for Monday, after advising the customer of the need on Friday. Suggest that he leave the car with you all day, and pick it up on his way home from work. Or he could stop by on his way to work, and you take him to work,

replacing the generator during the day, and pick him up after work.

The charge for replacing major engine components such as suggested should be $40 plus the cost of the replacement part. It’s also very important that whenever you contract to do this kind of work, you have the work done and the car ready for your

customer at the time you promise him it’ll be ready. No one likes to wait around for the completion of work that was promised to be done at a specific time. By completing the work on time, and having your customer’s car properly serviced as promised, you’ll

build more long-term loyalty than any fancy advertising, “come-on” gimmicks or rock-bottom prices ever offered.

So the thing to do as you organize your business is to establish accounts – sources of wholesale priced parts – with the major auto parts distributors in your area. You’ll want to maintain a general supply of new parts on hand, and not have to worry about paying for them for at least 30 days. In other words , you’ll need a cash-flow system that works to your ad vantage .

Your profit will come from developing a standard routine that allows you to move at least four cars through your shop every hour. Some automotive purists may argue that you’re only providing a “pep-up” instead of a tune-up, but let them beat their gums. Give each car the same procedure: an electronic check, new points and condenser, then an engine diagnosis, and collect your fee.

Talk with your customers. Get to know them and allow them to get to know you. Then when your engine diagnosis indicates a valve job or a new carburetor you can recommend it to them and they’ll trust your judgment.

You, as the operator of a quick tune-up shop, should not volunteer any major mechanical work. Suggest someone whose work you trust. Your customer will appreciate your suggestion and concern. And he’ll remain loyal to you for not taking his money and attempting to give him a repair job in an area where you don’t specialize.

After all, you’re a tune-up specialist – the guy who knows all there is to know about a car’s ignition system – the guy who keeps cars running smoothly. By specializing in a particular area of auto repair, and recommending other specialists as needed, you’ll

be able to quickly dispel the skepticism many car owners have for independent auto repair shops in general.

An assembly line in-and-out operation will reduce the necessary investment for tools, enable you to hire lower-cost workers, and greatly increase your profit potential by eliminating wasted motion. Keep it simple, routine and according to a definite procedure on every car.

Once you have your business established and a regular following of people who bring their cars to you for regular tune-ups – usually every six months – you can begin thinking about expansion. It’s best to hire college students, or “car-crazy” high school students, to work alongside you. Give your customers a chance to recognize and know your help. When you find one who seems to be especially mechanically inclined, take him aside and offer him the title of assistant manager of your shop.

Teach this young man how you want the business to operate; explain where the profit comes from; and assign more of the actual responsibilities to him. Leave him on his own to run the shop for longer periods of time. Be patient; compliment him on his work;

and if you want him to stay with you, give him a raise now and then, and eventually, a percentage of the profits.

Offering him a percentage arrangement will result in even greater profits for you, plus a very strong local image for your business. Because you’re “giving him” a part of the business, he’ll promote your business to his friends, and through him and his friends, a long line of new customers and a chain of loyalty that could become more valuable to your business than any amount of advertising you could buy.

When you’re ready to expand your operation from your garage to a regular commercial location, look for a vacant service station. One of the larger facilities built by a major oil company, located on a strategic corner, will be your best bet.

So long as you operate out of your garage and on a small scale, you probably won’t have to worry too much about licenses. That is, providing you get along well with your neighbors, don’t clutter up the street with 5 or 10 cars at a time, and don’t erect

any kind of sign indicating you’re doing business in a residentially zoned neighborhood.

However, once you move into a commercial location, you’ll need to register the name of your business with the appropriate local government authority. In most states, this is the office of the county clerk.

If your state has a sales tax, you’ll have to check with the state tax commissioner’s office to learn the rules on how the collection system operates.

All these licensing offices are in reality offices for tax collecting. Basically, they know nothing about your business, and usually could care less. Their main reason for existence is simply the collection of money for the administration of government in your area. If they should ask you questions relative to the worth of your business, or how much money you will be taking in, always estimate a much lower figure than either the

true worth or those you anticipate. Most license fees are based upon the investment of the entrepreneur and his anticipated income from the new business, and you certainly don’t want to start off paying excess taxes.

A good eye-catching sign is vital to the success of any business in a commercial location. The most important requirement for you is visibility. Your sign should be big enough and tall enough for people to see it from several different directions at a distance of at least a half block away. Check with your city ordinances for the sign limitations in the location you select.

Secondly, your sign should immediately state the service you’re offering. Hence, a sign that clearly and simply announces “Auto Tune-ups” fits this requirement. However, in order to attract customers into your shop, your sign should “promise” a benefit. It should describe an added benefit to the reader. So, your sign should read: “Rapid Auto Tune-Up!”

Basically, that’s all you’ll need for a sign, but to “fill it out” you might come up with a special logo or business motto. You can probably get an art student at your local college to design something for little more than the privilege of including it in his or her portfolio. For a business slogan or motto, something along the lines of “Better performance from your car, at a price you can afford,” is the kind of thing you want to come up with, and that will do you the most good.

Remember, fast, efficient service and low prices, coupled with a personality that makes the customer feel you’re his friend, are the keys to your success. Organize yourself; start slowly and build your customer loyalty; instill these principles in your employees, and you’ll be on your way. Study this report again, then act on the recommendations given here.

Discount Low Price Auto Repair Tools

GARNER NORTH CAROLINA CITY GUIDE & BUSINESS DIRECTORY

EARN MONEY WITH YOUR LOCAL CITY GUIDE