News

March 21, 2025

Trying Together Exec Director Discusses Your Career, Our Future Campaign with The Soul Pitt

Executive Director Cara Ciminillo recently discussed Trying Together’s Your Career, Our Future campaign in an interview with The Soul Pitt.

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Ciminillo appeared on The Soul Pitt’s podcast to discuss the campaign and who it is attempting to attract. The Soul Pitt is a website and print magazine that serves Pittsburgh’s communities of color.

The Your Career, Our Future campaign is aimed at combating a nationwide trend in which early learning programs have had to close classrooms and turn families away due to the lack of early educators available to meet child care demands. This, in turn, harms young children and their families, businesses, and the economy.

Your Career, Our Future – which is a joint effort between Trying Together and the Early Excellence Project – has collected stories from early educators and families in the Pittsburgh region. The campaign’s aim is to attract more people to answer the call to become early educators.

In The Soul Pitt interview, Ciminillo notes that the campaign aims to recruit early childhood educators by giving them the tools they need to succeed. It also shows current and future educators they are valued and respected.

“This campaign puts a face to the profession,” Ciminillo said during the interview. “We’ve collected stories from 15 people who have been positively impacted by early childhood education. This includes not only educators, but also child care program owners and parents.”

Ciminillo told The Soul Pitt that the campaign hopes to draw passionate people of all backgrounds, education levels, and skill sets who are nurturing, inspiring, and excited to educate young people. She added that the Institute for Career Pathways through Trying Together can help those who are starting out in their career as well as those looking to advance.

In the interview, Ciminillo is asked why it is important to share their stories in a campaign like Your Career, Our Future.

“So often, we focus on the difficulties faced by the field – but this campaign instead shares all the amazing parts of being an early childhood educator,” she said. “Early childhood education is more than a job – it’s a powerfully rewarding and vitally important career.”

In the interview, she also discusses the benefits of becoming an early childhood educator and how those who are interested in the program can obtain more information. 

To read the entire interview, visit The Soul Pitt.

News

February 26, 2025

International Women’s Day Panel and Luncheon

Accelerate Action will host its International Women’s Day panel and luncheon on March 7.

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Participants will start the day with a free community panel of local women leaders who are driving  change on critical issues. The panel will be followed by a ticketed luncheon.

The luncheon’s featured speaker is Lulu Garcia-Navarro. The panel is comprised of:

  • Trying Together Executive Director Cara Ciminillo
  • FISA Foundation Executive Director Kristy Trautmann
  • Planned Parenthood of Western Pennsylvania President & CEO Sydney Etheredge
  • Ford Institute for Human Security Director Dr. Muge Kokten Finkel
  • Black Women’s Policy Center Founder & CEO Rochelle L. Jackson

The panel begins at 9 a.m. at Point Park University, while the luncheon starts at 11:30 a.m. The event runs until 3 p.m. Tickets and registration are now available.

News

April 29, 2024

Trying Together Exec Director Touts Importance of Child Care Access on Our Region’s Business

Trying Together Executive Director Cara Ciminillo was featured on WPXI’s Our Region’s Business segment on Sunday, April 28. Ciminillo discussed the importance of child care access after the issue recently topped a survey from the Allegheny County Executive’s office.

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During the segment, WPXI’s Bill Flanagan noted that a lack of access to affordable child care could be the biggest barrier to building a workforce pipeline in the region. Ciminillo joined Kendra Ross, Director of Social Impact at Duolingo, and Dan DeBone, President & CEO of the Westmoreland County Chamber of Commerce, to discuss the issue.

Ciminillo said Trying Together works to support child care workers in the field as well as improve quality and advocate on their behalf.

“The crisis existed before the (COVID-19) pandemic, but the pandemic really just squeezed it,” she said. “All the other sectors have been able to move up their wages, but child care is really limited in its ability to do that. We know this is because families can’t afford more. The average infant-toddler child care slot is $12,000 per year. So, you can’t put more of those costs on families – they’re struggling already.”

Ciminillo said the provider workforce doesn’t bring in enough money from state subsidies to augment that revenue formula.

“The tax credit is great, but if you have 100% of the tax credit but you don’t have the staff to support the children who need the care, you can’t use the tax credit,” she said. “It’s really important that we invest in recruitment and retention of the workforce.”

Ross said Duolingo was trying to provide grant money for child care organizations that don’t have enough resources. DeBone said the chamber of commerce advocates for legislation to help early child care programs.

Last year, Trying Together partnered with Duolingo, the Early Excellence Project, and Candor & Co in the creation of a new program called “Early Learners First.” The program’s goal is to strengthen and enhance Pittsburgh’s early education system by investing in local child care programs. Duolingo, headquartered in East Liberty, pledged $1 million to the program.

Trying Together also is a member of the Westmoreland County Chamber of Commerce and has partnered with the chamber to host informational sessions about the impact child care has on the economy.

Affordable Child Care Access Tops Survey

In the recent All in Allegheny Community Survey, increasing access to affordable child care and care for older adults to make it easier for workers and people participating in workforce training programs ranked first. The Allegheny County Executive’s office invited county residents to share their ideas, priorities, and needs with County Executive Sara Innamorato’s office through the survey. 

According to the survey results, affordable child or family care options was the top priority for 50.8% of all respondents. Other top issues included reduced-fare public transit, the creation of good-paying jobs, and protecting worker’s rights.

To listen to what Ciminallo had to say, watch the Our Region’s Business segment. For more information on Trying Together’s advocacy regarding access to child care, visit our Public Policy Agenda page.

News

January 15, 2021

Centering Women in Economic Recovery

Centering Women in Economic Recovery is a free five-day lunchtime series that will run from Monday, January 25 to Friday, January 29, 2021. The series will feature regional female thought leaders from organizations with deep expertise in policy, business, community, public sector, and education. Join in for one or all five days!

About

Coined the She-cession, the economic fallout of Covid-19 has disproportionately affected women in key ways. Women are one-third more likely to work in a sector that was shut down during the lockdown, more likely to be furloughed, and 47 percent more likely to have lost or quit their jobs. And, women shoulder more child care responsibilities and household work than men.

Centering Women in Economic Recovery is a free 5-day lunchtime series with regional female thought leaders from organizations with deep expertise in policy, business, community, public sector, and education. These lunchtime sessions will explore the policies and actions needed to build a more female-forward infrastructure that supports equity for working women.

Featured Sessions

Policy

Monday, January 25, 2021  |  12 – 1 p.m.
Moderator: Heather Arnet, Women and Girls Foundation

Panelists: 

    • Megan Nestor, Fourth Economy
    • Carol Joyner, Family Values@Work
    • Claire Ewing-Nelson, National Women’s Law Center
    • Rochelle Jackson, Black Women’s Policy Agenda
    • Rosamaria Cristello, Latina Community Center

Private Sector Response

Tuesday, January 26, 2021  |  12 – 1 p.m.
Moderator: Jessica Brooks, Pittsburgh Business Group on Health

Panelists: 

    • Sabrina Saunders, Vibrant Pittsburgh
    • Katherine Kellaman, Port Authority of Allegheny County
    • Carrie Riggle, First Commonwealth Bank
    • Anne Gargas, Torchlight

Government and Public Sector Response

Wednesday, January 27, 2021  |  12 – 1 p.m.
Moderator: Anne Sekula, The Salon

Panelists: 

    • Anu Jain, City of Pittsburgh GEC / Workforce Equity Initiative
    • Moriah Hathaway, Pennsylvania Governor’s Commission on Women

Nonprofit Response

Thursday, January 28, 2021  |  12 – 1 p.m.
Moderator: Michelle Pagano Heck, Nonprofit Talent

Panelists: 

    • Bobbi Watt Greer, The United Way of Southwest PA
    • Tanya Volkes Mallory, Dress for Success
    • Michelle McMurray, The Pittsburgh Foundation

Child Care / K-12 Education Response

Friday, January 29, 2021  |  12 – 1 p.m.
Moderator: Cara Ciminillo, Trying Together

Panelists: 

    • Heather Hopson, Single Mom Defined
    • Muffy Mendoza Brown, Brown Mommas
    • Megan Rose, Center for Women Pittsburgh

Registration

To register, visit the online registration page. For questions, contact The Salon at info@thesalonpgh.com.