04/02/2026
đ¸đŁ Youâre Invited to an Easter Egg Hunt! đŁđ¸
Raze Early Learning and Development Center is excited to partner with Kings Chapel to host a fun-filled Easter Egg Hunt for our community!
Date: Saturday April 4, 2026
Time: 10:00 AM â 12:00 PM
Location: 6519 N Lidgerwood Spokane, Wa 99208
Bring your little ones out for a morning full of joy, connection, and celebration! There will be egg hunts, laughter, and plenty of fun surprises for the kids to enjoy. This is a beautiful opportunity to gather as a community and create lasting memories together.
⨠Come ready to hunt, play, and celebrate the season with us!
⨠Donât forget your baskets!
We canât wait to see you there!
03/28/2026
Raze's Evening Program is Coming July 2026
Because families donât stop at 5 PM and neither do we.
Raze is proud to introduce our Evening Care Program, designed to support working families with safe, culturally affirming, high-quality care into the night.
Hours: 5:30 AM â 11:30 PM, MondayâFriday
Homemade meals & snacks
Personalized rest spaces that feel like home
Structured routines that support growth, even after hours
This isnât just extended care itâs intentional care when families need it most.
Pre-Enrollment Now Open
Call and schedule your walk through at 509-587-3490.
03/28/2026
Discover all that Raze Early Learning and Development Center has to offer on our website!
Stay informed with the latest updates, explore our wide range of offerings, and connect with everything exciting happening here.
Visit us at https://razethenarrative.com today to see whatâs waiting for you!
Raze Early Learning an Development Center
Highlighting Black Excellence in Shared American Experiences
03/10/2026
Call us today to set up a tour.
03/07/2026
đ¨ 11,000 Washington Families Could Lose Access to Child Care Assistance đ¨
A recent estimate from BrightSpark shows that around 11,000 families who qualify for child care assistance may not be able to enroll if House Bill 2689 moves forward.
Child care assistance programs help parents work, attend school, and provide stability for their children. Limiting access means thousands of families could be forced to make impossible choices between employment and caring for their children.
For many familiesâespecially working parents and those already facing economic barriersâthis support is not a luxury. It is essential for family stability and child development.
We must continue advocating for policies that support families, strengthen the child care workforce, and ensure children have safe, nurturing environments while their parents work.
đŹ What do you think about this proposed change?
đ˘ Stay informed. Stay engaged. Our families deserve better.
02/16/2026
3-Month Community Update
Spokane⌠look what weâre building together.
In just three months, our enrollment has more than quadrupled. We are now at 45% of our daytime capacity â and still growing. Weâve opened two additional classrooms (Toddler 2 and our School Age room), and we currently have space available for children 12 monthsâ13 years.
But Raze was never just about enrollment numbers.
Programming That Wraps Around Families
Our Mental & Behavioral Health Program continues to serve three childcare centers, making behavioral health supports available to over 200 students and their families, while also providing mental health support to the teachers and administrators who care for them.
Our expanded Before & After School Program now includes transportation, holiday care, and non-school day programming.
Weâve also launched Emergency Respite Care Services, already supporting two families â one short-term and one long-term â because the village shows up when it matters most.
Community Engagement & Cultural Celebration
Through a powerful collaboration with New Hope Baptist Church, DoorDash, the General Baptist Convention of the Northwest, the Spokane Area Ministersâ Wives and Ministersâ Widows Fellowship, and the Spokane Ministers Fellowship â we helped feed 250 families through the community turkey drive.
We attended the non-profit fundraising event put on by Shades of Motherhood Network. This event was a celebration of both ingenuity and joy.
We hosted our first annual Childrenâs Kwanzaa Celebration, celebrating with over 30 community families in partnership with Shades of Motherhood Network and the Carl Maxey Center.
In January, we marched in the Martin Luther King Jr. Parade organized by Ms. Freda Gandy of the Martin Luther King Jr. Family Outreach Center.
We marched with infant, toddler, preschool teachers, board members, and families â visibly affirming that dismantling the preschool-to-prison pipeline begins in early childhood spaces.
Our Executive Director also authored a piece in The Black Lens addressing the quiet erosion of Black American history in public spaces.
At Raze, narrative protection is pipeline disruption.
We advocated before City Council in support of the MLK Day and Juneteenth resolution â affirming these as essential American civic observances rooted in constitutional struggle and liberation.
Our message was clear:
Protecting Black history protects our childrenâs understanding of citizenship and belonging.
We visited Capitol Hill to advocate for children and families â speaking on childcare access, immigration supports for the Haitian community, housing stability, Medicaid access, and more. Special thank you to our coalition Take All and community partner Waters Meet for their leadership and sponsorship.
Our Executive Director:
⢠Delivered the keynote for the Black Student Union at Spokane Falls Community College, speaking on dismantling the preschool-to-prison pipeline one village member at a time.
⢠Spoke on a Black Lens panel addressing the crisis of dyslexia and dysgraphia in Black children â and how Raze is intentionally addressing early literacy gaps before they become disciplinary pathways.
⢠Appeared on the Everyday Mentors Podcast to discuss perseverance and building vision from the ground up.
⢠Served on a panel for Rasiens Dream advocating to end Female Ge***al Mutilation within the Massai Tribe.
⢠Spoke for Leadership Spokane on the villageâs responsibility to disrupt systemic inequities at their root
We were also proud to see our very own Jordyn Bower, Raze High School Classroom Aide, featured in The Black Lens and at the Northwest Passages Black Voices Symposium â representing the next generation of leadership rising from within our village.
Representation is not accidental. It is cultivated.
We were also honored to sponsor After Dark: An R&B Affair, showcasing local artists through live performance, curated by photographer Kemoni.
đ Recognition & Awards
For her work through Raze Development, our Executive Director was honored as:
⢠NAACP Community Champion Award recipient
⢠The Spokesman-Review Woman of the Year
⢠Nominee for the YWCA Women of Achievement Award
This is only our first three months.
This Spokane village is not just watching â itâs participating. Itâs building. Itâs protecting. Itâs advocating. Itâs celebrating.
And together, we are dismantling the preschool-to-prison pipeline â one child, one family, one classroom, one partnership at a time.
Stay tuned for upcoming posts highlighting stories from the Raze classrooms and Village Support â because this movement is just getting started.
01/20/2026
Today, a few members of the Raze teamâinfant, toddler, and preschool teachersâalong with our board members and their families, joined the MLK Rally and March. It was an incredible honor to walk together, stand together, and be in true community with one another.
Moments like this remind us that our work does not stop at the classroom door. We teach, lead, and advocate togetherâfor our children, our families, and our future.
We were especially proud to witness our own Raze Board of Directors Secretary, Stephanie Noble-Beans, deliver the closing remarks. Watching her speak with such clarity, courage, and purpose was a powerful reminder of the leadership and values that ground this organization.
Grateful for this village. Grateful for this work. Grateful to walk forward together.
01/14/2026
Grateful. Proud. And hopeful.
Tonight, City Council voted 6â1 to pass resolution 2025-0123 reaffirming our communityâs commitment to honoring Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. Day and Juneteenth, two defining moments in our nationâs journey toward justice and freedom.
Thank you to everyone who sent letters, signed up to testify, shared messages of support, and showed up in solidarity. Your voices mattered. Your presence mattered. And this outcome reflects that.
I also want to thank Spokane City Council for affirming that MLK and Juneteenth remain essential to our collective story and values as a community.
This was never about politics. It was about standing up when our shared history and the holidays that honor it are diminished and choosing clarity over silence.
Onward. đ¤
President Lisa Gardner
01/14/2026
đ Thank You, Spokane Housing Authority đ
We want to extend our deepest gratitude to Spokane Housing Authority for their incredibly thoughtful donation of books and diapers and wipes to our students and families. Because of your generosity, our children now have access to engaging books that support early literacyâand your diaper donation alone provided two full months of diapering service for our students.
This kind of support goes far beyond supplies. It eases stress for families, strengthens daily care for children, and reinforces what it truly means to invest in community. We are so thankful for partners like Spokane Housing Authority who show up in meaningful, practical ways for our youngest learners and the families who love them.
Thank you for being part of the village that helps our children thrive. đ
01/12/2026
We continue to elevate the history and contributions of those who fought unapologetically during the American Civil Rights Movement. This is our history. We recognize the hard truthsânot to be reshaped by revisionist history. We gather to pay homage to the sacrifices of some that benefited all.
Persistence, not permission.