Will pay up to $725 per child, per month, in childcare expenses for qualified full-time students in these four fields
Yavapai Community College has announced a new three-year pilot program for students in the Nursing, Nursing intent, Early Childhood and K-12 Education whose childcare costs may have prevented them from attending college. The Community College in cooperation with the Arizona Department of Economic Security will pay up to $725 per child, per month, in childcare expenses for qualified full-time students in these four areas of study.
In its press release of August 20, the Community College explained the program as follows:
“This is going to be a game-changer,” Yavapai College Dean Joan E. Fisher said. “Childcare is a leading obstacle for parents who enter or complete a degree program. We’re excited about the possibilities this will offer students, their children and families in our community.”
The Higher Education Childcare Subsidy will allocate $150,000 toward childcare expenses for community college students each year, in order to recruit and train more teachers and medical professionals. “Arizona has a severe shortage of nurses, early childhood educators and K-12 teachers,” Fisher explained. “We are targeting those people who would go back to school if their childcare expenses weren’t so high.”
The College estimates the program could provide full-time, year-round care for 17 children or part-time care for 25 children over the three-year period.
Qualified applicants should be current or aspiring Nursing, Nursing-intent, Early Childhood or K-12 Education students. They must be (or plan to be) full-time students and make 165% above the state poverty level or less; and they must remain in good standing within their academic program. Applicants are encouraged to sign up immediately and begin the process by which their cases are assessed and ranked for possible subsidy.
At Yavapai College, the Childcare in Education Subsidy will be part of support program that secures the best possible circumstances for kids. “It’s more than a handing out money,” Fisher said. “If you’re selected, you’ll be put into a Parent Cohort with a success coach who will work with you to find the best possible option with a DES or DHS certified care center.”
Because Yavapai County has a scarcity of approved childcare centers, YC’s program offers a practical alternative: “With a background check, a spouse, grandparent or family member can become DES-certified and receive the subsidy.” She explained. “So if you live in Paulden, or Bagdad or someplace without a center, you don’t have to drive to one. This keeps the subsidy within the family, supporting the caregiver as the parent learns.”
Yavapai College will begin the program this Fall semester. An Intent to Apply Form is available now on the YC website at: yc.edu/parentcohort. All interested parties – including those planning to enroll in future semesters, and eligible parents just considering a return to college – are encouraged to fill out the form as soon as possible. “That gets you on the list, and gets you time-stamped,” Fisher says. “Then we can begin the process.”
The process of evaluation, ranking and awards will create a cohort of talented, determined students, and support them until they join the workforce. “We’re thrilled to participate in a program that trains professionals, supports working families and puts half a million dollars into the childcare structure in Yavapai County.”
For more information on the Higher Education Childcare Subsidy, and the Intent to Apply Form, please visit: yc.edu/parentcohort.

The three public universities in Arizona and its largest community colleges have indicated how they will enforce the mask mandates they have imposed to protect the education community from the rapid spread of Covid-19. Failure to comply is considered a violation of the student code of conduct.
Pima County Community College in Tucson had joined the University of Arizona, Arizona State, Northern Arizona and the ten Maricopa Community Colleges in requiring face coverings indoors when social distancing is not possible.
Yavapai Community College has fallen behind Arizona’s Universities and its largest Community College in Covid-19 safety protocols by not mandating the wearing of masks in classrooms, offices, and other indoor gathering facilities when classes begin August 16. 


The United States Supreme Court refused Thursday to block Indiana University’s requirement that students be vaccinated against Covid-19 before being allowed to attend classes in the fall semester. Justice Amy Coney Barrett denied a request from eight students at Indiana University who had claimed the University of Indiana should be barred from mandating that they be vaccinated because the risks associated with the vaccines outweighed the potential benefits for the population in their age group.
everyone at ASU. “Unlike the legislation applicable to K-12 districts, neither the governor’s order nor the legislation applicable to the universities prohibits a mask mandate,” said ASU spokesperson Jay Thorne. “Instead, it prohibits the universities from either requiring vaccinations or imposing different requirements on students to attend classes (such as masking or testing) based on the student’s vaccination status or willingness to disclose that status.”
Yavapai Community College’s Women’s Soccer Team roster for 2021 has been announced. This will be the first season for this soccer team.
In a July 29 news release, Yavapai Community College announced that it was offering several free tuition classes at its Career and Technical Education Center (CTEC), which is located at the Prescott airport. The surprise announcement came at a time when the Community College had been heavily marketing fee tuition trade skills classes only on its Verde Campus at its brand new Trade Skills Training Center. The College’s fall brochures had highlighted several free tuition classes offered at its Trade Skills Training Center facility on the Verde Campus with no mention or suggestion of similar free classes being offered at CTEC.