Based in the Buckeye-Shaker neighborhood, offers a six-month culinary arts training program for people returning from prison and jail. Students can even start their training while incarcerated by taking a . The program, which has over 500 graduates and a , has opened doors for formerly incarcerated people, who .
But the program has not been an option for people who have children to take care of, said Brandon Chrostowski, founder, president, and CEO of EDWINS. Throughout the program鈥檚 16 years of operation, have not completed the program, often due to lack of child care.
Chrostowski remembers a time when a father in the EDWINS program had to leave to take care of his kid during the day and ended up not returning to the program. 鈥淚t would have been nice at that moment if I had a child care center to say, 鈥楴o problem. Let鈥檚 get (the child) up here. Come back to work; come back to school. Let鈥檚 get through it,鈥 Chrostowski said. 鈥淚 didn鈥檛 have that option. I wanted to have that option.鈥
In late May, Chrostowski opened the at 13017 Larchmere Blvd. to provide free child care to EDWINS students and alumni. The center is in Shaker Heights near the Cleveland border. It鈥檚 part of a growing which includes training centers, a bakery, butcher shop, and two restaurants: and . The campus also has apartments and family housing, in addition to amenities like a fitness center, basketball court, small farm, and park. Chrostowski is now closing a deal for 16 additional units of family housing at 2950 S. Moreland Blvd.
鈥淗ere in that housing, you have access to everything,鈥 Chrostowski said of the existing family housing and apartments.
People based outside the area can access opportunities at EDWINS too, though. Chrostowski said the Cleveland Browns will pay for people to travel to Cleveland for the six-month training program. EDWINS also teaches at the Cuyahoga County juvenile detention center on Quincy Ave. and the Grafton Correctional Institution, a men鈥檚 state prison in Lorain County. With its tablet course, EDWINS has the capacity to reach 300,000 to 400,000 incarcerated people nationwide, Chrostowski said, and the course has about 80,000 active users on its tablets.
Now, Chrostowski is working on reframing the EDWINS program as a possibility for people with children. The team is doing outreach at shelters and prisons and spreading the word to the and the .
From the outside, EDWINS Family Center looks like a home, with potted flowers hanging from a fence enclosing the front yard area. Inside, a mural of jungle animals and children鈥檚 artwork decorate the walls. The space has multiple play areas stocked with a variety of toys and activities, including stuffed animals, books, and a play kitchen.
Chrostowski purchased the building from his graphic designer, who used to have an office space there. The team raised over $400,000 from both individuals and foundations to buy and renovate the space, he said. The building is near the Shaker Heights-Cleveland border, and navigating the requirements of the two municipalities was a challenge, he said.
Antwaun Teasley, who graduated from EDWINS鈥 training program in 2016, was the contractor for the renovations to the family center. He works for EDWINS as a culinary arts instructor at the juvenile detention center and sends his daughter, who turns four this month, to the center from 11 a.m. to 6 or 7 p.m.
His daughter also goes to another day care, but it鈥檚 closed during the summer. 鈥淭he family center came right on time,鈥 he said.
Teasley said he encourages others to participate in the EDWINS culinary training program all the time.
鈥淵ou can鈥檛 miss. They give you free clothes; they give you free everything. You eat, you work, you get paid, and you get free day care 鈥 beautiful,鈥 Teasley said.
Having free child care available at the family center will allow more people to participate in the EDWINS program and land jobs in the culinary arts field, he said.
鈥淣ow, there鈥檚 no excuses. Come get your education. Come grow. Come learn, and have some fun. And you can involve your children at the same time,鈥 he said.
The family center has served 8-10 children so far and currently has four children who regularly come to the center. Plus, some graduates are looking to send their children there in the future, said Donita Hawthorne, the center鈥檚 director. It鈥檚 licensed to care for up to 22 children.
鈥淚t鈥檚 picking up slowly but surely. But I鈥檓 just glad that we鈥檙e here so when the need arises 鈥 we鈥檒l always be here,鈥 Hawthorne said.
Three employees currently work at the center, and Chrostowski is also licensed to help out if needed. The number of workers required depends on how many kids are at the center on a given day and their ages, he said.
The center provides child care to EDWINS students and alumni free of cost, and it鈥檚 open from 11 a.m. to 11 p.m. Monday through Saturday to accommodate kitchen work schedules.
鈥淚t means that everyone can hope and dream,鈥 Chrostowski said. 鈥淩egardless of your past, you can hope and dream. Regardless of your circumstance, you can hope and dream.鈥
EDWINS gives parents the tools to make that possible, helping bring dreams within reach.
鈥淚t completes that circle of hope and possibility to achieve it,鈥 he said.