ECS Partners with TOOTRiS to Connect Families with Head Start

Episcopal Community Services (ECS), a nonprofit social services agency providing early childhood education and other critical services to children and adults across San Diego, has partnered with TOOTRiS, a first-of-its-kind platform that provides on-demand Child Care. 

The COVID-19 pandemic has worsened the struggles of working parents across the nation to find affordable, high-quality care for their children. To help make this difficult time easier on low-income families, ECS and TOOTRiS have come together to connect parents with ECS’s Head Start programs. All of ECS’s 17 Head Start sites are now accessible for free on the TOOTRiS platform, which allows parents to look near their home or work, using filters to find Child Care that fits their needs and budgetary requirements – even for temporary slots or drop-ins – and to view photos of the site and arrange a visit. This partnership will provide parents assurance that their children are being engaged, enriched, and supported by a licensed preschool provider, allowing parents to focus on work and other responsibilities.

“We feel privileged to be instrumental in helping Elizabeth Fitzsimons and her team at ECS achieve their noble vision of providing quality early childhood education to our communities,” said Alessandra Lezama, Founder & CEO of TOOTRiS. “With this partnership, families in our region can now have critical on-demand access to these Head Start programs with an easy click of a button."

Of the families enrolled in ECS’s Head Start and Early Head Start educational programs, 70% have one or more parent/guardian that is employed, and almost 90% of the families identify as Hispanic. Many families with children under five years of age meet the eligibility criteria for Head Start, including those who are foster youth, special needs, or below the federal poverty level. According to the CDC, essential workers are more likely to belong to these populations and provide critical support to their communities. For an essential worker, a flexible schedule from an employer is rare and may not allow for instances where affordable and quality care can consistently be secured.

“We are thrilled to be partnering with TOOTRiS, who has made it their mission to tackle a huge issue in our region: lack of affordable high-quality care,” said Elizabeth Fitzsimons, Chief Executive Officer at ECS. “Part of our organization’s mission is to empower adults and this partnership will do just that by connecting parents to quality early childhood education. This is a great opportunity to help children learn and grow, and support parents who work hard to provide for their families.”

ECS provides more than $30 million in health and human services in the areas of homelessness, mental health, substance use disorder treatment, and early childhood education to more than 6,000 clients in San Diego. Founded in 2019, TOOTRiS is a start-up company that provides 100% free resources to more than 122,000 childcare providers in 22 states, connects working parents to these programs in real-time, and enables employers to incorporate Child Care as a benefit through its technology platform. The TOOTRiS platform can be accessed online at www.tootris.com.  

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ECS Welcomes Two New Board Members in January

Rocket Ewell joins ECS Board. January 2022.

Rockette Ewell

Rockette Ewell is Vice President, Community Affairs Manager at U.S. Bank. A member of the Community Affairs and Engagement team, she leads charitable giving and community reinvestment efforts across three Southern California markets - San Diego, Orange County and the Inland Empire. In addition, she helps identify and develop strategic community partnerships and employee volunteer opportunities that support the bank’s corporate social responsibility priorities as well as drive business results.  

Rockette is active in the community, currently serving on boards of the Boys and Girls Clubs of San Diego (executive committee member), the San Diego Museum of Us (executive committee member and secretary) and NeighborWorks Orange County, where she is vice chair. She is a member of San Diego Community College District’s San Diego Promise Development Committee and is U.S. Bank’s representative on the San Diego City-County Reinvestment Task Force. A 2015 graduate of LEAD San Diego’s IMPACT program, she joined the bank in June 2014.

A native Texan, Rockette is a graduate of Princeton University, where she majored in Religion. She and her husband reside in north San Diego County.

Dr. Richard Lee joins ECS Board. January 2022.

The Reverend Dr. Richard Lee

Fr. Richard was born in Leicester, in the heart of the England, and went to University in Bangor, North Wales where he studied Electronic Engineering. He liked Wales so much that he stayed there for a decade! During that time, he got a Ph.D. in Biophysics, deepened his faith and became involved with the Church in Wales and spent two months working with the Mar Thoma Church in Kerala, South India.

After moving to the United States in 2000, he lived in the San Francisco Bay area before moving to San Diego in 2004. Fr. Richard is a bi-vocational priest, which means he has a full-time job working in science at a local biotech company. He trained for ordination at the diocesan School for Ministry, in Ocean Beach and was ordained a deacon at the Cathedral, and a priest at Good Samaritan where he served as Curate. He is married to Antonio, who is a certified nursing assistant.