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Community August 24, 2007
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Program reaches out to Mixtec community
Services include healthcare and help for students
By Michelle Knight knight@theacorn.com

A countywide agency charged with ensuring children enter school healthy and ready to learn, is reaching out to the linguistically-isolated Mixtec community.

First 5 Ventura County is the sole sponsor of the "Puentes: Building Bridges to Ventura County's Mixtec Community" program, which operates through Oxnard's Mixteco/Indigena Community Organizing Project, or MICOP.

The twoyear $100,000 outreach program has connected many in the Mixtec community to needed medical, educational and social services, said the project's Executive Director Susan Haverland.

Haverland estimates that 20,000 of the Mixtec community live in the county while 100,000 reside in the state. Indigenous to Oaxacan, Mexico, the Mixtec generally don't speak English or Spanish but only the Mixteco language.

Many are impoverished farm

workers who are young, hardworking parents of small children in need of housing, food, health care and other life essentials, Haverland said.

"The Mixtec farm workers are the poorest of the poor in Ventura County," she said.

As a result, they have a difficult time accessing basic services since few if any government offices and social service agencies have Mixteco translators on staff.

Over the last year, the program has trained about 20 Mixteco-speaking workers, promotores, to go into this community to explain educational programs and social and medical services available to them, all with the goal of enriching the lives young children so they can

enter school healthy and ready to learn.

"The Mixtec population makes a valuable contri

bution to Ventura County

agricultural economy," Haverland said. "Their children attend local schools; they are our neighbors. Helping our neighbors keep their children healthy- (it) benefits all of us."

Although Oxnard and Newbury Park have a sizable Mixtec community, a few families live in cities throughout the county, such as Moorpark.

"Here, we don't (have a translator) and that's unfortunate," said Sandi Lane, coordinator of First 5's Family Resource Center in Moorpark.

When a Mixtec family comes in, they call on someone from the community to translate for them, Lane said.

Eighteen Family Resource Centers are located in Ventura County, most are a part of the First 5 Ventura County's Neighborhood for Learning preschools. Among the free services available to all families with infants and children up to 5 years old regardless of income are parenting, nutrition and English language classes and recreational programs, field trips and free dental care for children.

First 5 Ventura County is a public entity that uses funds from Proposition 10- a cigarette tax- to promote early childhood development and health programs for infants and children up to 5-years old and their families.

For more information, visit http://first5ventura.org and click on "Neighborhoods for Learning."


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