Who We Are

The Long Beach Early Childhood Education Committee envisions a future where every child thrives and is supported by inclusive, high-quality early education. We strive to ensure families feel supported, educators are equipped with vital resources, and children have opportunities for success, building a stronger community from the start.

We are a broad-based collaborative composed of educators, advocates, ECE providers, parents, special education, health and mental health professionals who all have the common goal of enriching, advocating, and serving the early childhood community in Long Beach. For over 20 years, we have provided services, programs, and resources to families with young children ages 0-5. We have hosted countless Long Beach families at Early Learning & Kindergarten Festivals, providing professional development to over 600 early childhood professionals annually, spearheading ongoing policy and advocacy efforts for families, and being trailblazers for early childhood on a daily basis.

The LBECE Committee operates under the tax exempt status of its Fiscal Sponsor, Public Health Foundation Enterprises, Inc (aka Heluna Health)

Heluna Health is a 501(c)(3) non-profit organization that provides various finance, administrative and human resources services to other individuals, entities or organizations providing services aligned with its mission.

Our People

Compassionate, Experienced, and Dedicated

Board & Staff

  • Sarah Soriano

    Sarah Soriano

    Board Chair

    Executive Director, Young Horizons

  • Margaret Blevins

    Margaret Blevins

    Secretary

    Director of Programs, Long Beach Day Nursery

  • Karissa Selvester

    Karissa Selvester

    Treasurer

    Executive Director at Mayor’s Fund for Long Beach, City of Long Beach

  • Joelle Landazabal

    Joelle L. Landazabal

    Member at Large

    Program Administrator III, Children’s Home Society of California, Long Beach

  • Jennifer Harper

    Jennifer Harper

    Fund Development Workgroup Chair

    Executive Director, Long Beach Day Nursery

  • Christina Hall

    Christina Hall

    Public Policy & Advocacy Workgroup Chair

    Director, Community Initiatives at The Nonprofit Partnership

  • Sharon Barker

    Sharon Barker

    Secretary

    Program Specialist Expanded Learning Opportunities, Long Beach Unified School Dist.

  • Cindy Young

    Cindy Young

    Workforce Enhancement Workgroup Chair

    Program Specialist Expanded Learning Opportunities, Long Beach Unified School Dist.

  • Alejandra Moses

    Vice Chair - Public Policy & Education

    Early Childhood Education Coordinator, Long Beach Dept. of Health & Human Svcs.

  • Christina Cortez

    Christina Cortez

    Vice Chair - Community Impact

    Program Coordinator/B3 Team, Long Beach Unified School District

  • Kristina Qualters

    Kristina Qualters

    Vice Chair - Workforce Enhancement

    Program Coordinator, Long Beach Unified School District

  • Gaby Acosta

    Gaby Acosta

    Marketing & Membership Workgroup Chair

    Early Childhood Program Specialist, LB Department of Health & Human Services: Community Health

  • Mary Lopez

    Mary Lopez

    Workforce Enhancement Workgroup Chair

    Program Coordinator at Long Beach Unified School District

  • Jessica Chon

    Jessica Chon

    ECE Program Coordinator

Our Members

Why ECE Matters

Long Beach Demographics and Early Childhood Statistics

  • 32,474

    Number of children in Long Beach under age 5

  • 7

    Number that Long Beach is in most populous cities in California

  • 10

    The rank number of Long Beach across the nation in diversity

  • 40%

    of Long Beach’s 500,000 residents identify as Latino/Hispanic

  • 29%

    of Long Beach’s 500,000 residents identify as White

  • 13%

    of Long Beach’s 500,000 residents identify as African American

  • >12%

    of Long Beach’s 500,000 residents identify as Asian

  • 26%

    Of Long Beach residents are immigrants

  • 44%

    Of Long Beach households speak a language other than English

  • 7%

    Of the Long Beach population is under 5 years old

  • 27%

    Of Long Beach children under five years old live in poverty

  • 3.6%

    Children under 18 in zip code 90808 who are living in poverty

  • 5.7%

    Children under 18 in zip code 90803 who are living in poverty

  • 35.7%

    Children who live in households with Supplemental Security Income (SSI), cash public assistance income, or Food Stamps/SNAP benefits

  • 23%

    Children who are eligible for publicly funded EC services; they meet state and federal enrollment requirements for childcare subsidies.

  • 23%

    of Long Beach children are of eligible preschool enrollment age but are un- or under-served by child care/early education (i.e. preschool) services

  • 13.9%

    Of households in Long Beach are headed by a single parent

  • Triple

    The amount a child's brain increases in the first two years of life

  • 90%

    Of a child’s brain has formed by the age of 5

  • 16,164

    Eligible children who are left unserved

  • 18 mos

    The age when a gap in early vocabulary development between children in poverty and their higher-income peers is evident

  • 7–10%

    Return on the investment that every dollar invested in high-quality early childhood education produces

  • $8,000

    Average annual child care cost for family childcare

  • $13,000

    Average annual child care cost for center child care