Wichita Child Care Center's Closing Leaves Parents Scrambling for Replacement Child Care

Posted in: Impact of the Economy on Child Care, Kansas
August 5, 2009

WICHITA, Kan. (AP) — Nearly 100 Wichita families — including dozens with special-needs chidren — are scrambling to find child care after Rainbows United filed for Chapter 11 bankruptcy.


Rainbows, which serves about 2,600 children, announced last week that it will sell two buildings, lay off staff members, reduce services and downsize child care.

Rainbows declared bankruptcy after finding misleading internal financial statements and realizing it owed the Internal Revenue Service $2.3 million in withholding taxes.

Rainbows spokeswoman Michelle Eastman said the organization is eliminating child care for 94 children — including 36 infants or toddlers with special needs.


Full text available at KFSM.