
Monterey County
Monterey County, officially the County of Monterey, is a county located on the Pacific coast in the U.S. state of California. As of the 2020 United States census, its population was 439,035. The county’s largest city and county seat is Salinas.
Executive Director: Javier Zaldivar
Phone: 408-374-9960
TTY: N/A
Fax: 408-376-0586
Early Start Intake: Santa Clara, Santa Cruz and San Benito
Counties: 1-844-700-9889 | Monterey County: 1-831-443-1279
Address: 6203 San Ignacio Avenue, Suite #200, San Jose, CA 95119
Counties Served: Monterey, San Benito, Santa Clara, and Santa Cruz
Implementation of Part C of the Individuals with Disabilities Education Act mandates states to implement a comprehensive early intervention service system for all infants and toddlers with disabilities or at risk, and their families. Family support services are included in these systems.
In California, Early Start Family Resource Centers are part of the Early Start Program. Staffed by families of children with special needs, family resource centers offer parent-to-parent support and help parents, families, and children locate and use needed services. They offer support services and resources in many languages, which may include newsletters, resource libraries, websites, parent-to-parent groups, sibling support groups, warmlines, and information and referral for parents and professionals.
1900 Garden Rd., Suite 230
Monterey, CA 93940
(831) 372-2730
In 1977, all school districts and county school offices were mandated to form consortiums in geographical regions of sufficient size and scope to provide for all special education service needs of children residing within the region boundaries. Each region, Special Education Local Plan Area (SELPA), developed a local plan describing how it would provide special education services.
SELPAs are dedicated to the belief that all students can learn and that special needs students must be guaranteed equal opportunity to become contributing members of society. SELPAs facilitate high quality educational programs and services for special needs students and training for parents and educators. The SELPA collaborates with county agencies and school districts to develop and maintain healthy and enriching environments in which special needs students and families can live and succeed.
901 Blanco Circle · West Campus 17 and 18
Salinas, CA 93901
831-755-0342
Monterey
11 Quail Run Circle, STE 101
Salinas, CA 93907
(831) 757-0775
M-F: 8-5
Services in English
Montebello
401 N. Garfield Ave.
Montebello, CA 90640
(323) 890-9600
M-F: 8-5
Services in English
Monterey County Office of Education
Laurie M. Ramirez, Ph.D.
901 Blanco Circle
Salinas, CA 93901
Phone: 831-784-4141
Fax: 831.755.0367
Email: laramirez@montereycoe.org
1125 Baldwin Street
Salinas, CA 93906
(831) 444-8549
901 Blanco Cir.
Salinas, CA 93912-0851
(831) 755-0300
Early Head Start is a federally funded community-based program for low-income families with pregnant women, infants, and toddlers up to age 3. It is a program that came out of the Head Start Program. In addition to providing or linking families with needed services—medical, mental health, nutrition, and education—Early Head Start can provide a place for children to experience consistent, nurturing relationships and stable, ongoing routines.
Early Head Start Programs offer three different options and programs may offer one or more to families. The three options are: a home-based option, a center-based option, or a combination option in which families get a set number of home visits and a set number of center-based experiences, There are also locally designed options, which in some communities include family child care.
901 Blanco Circle
Salinas, CA 93901
831-755-0350
The Family Empowerment Centers (FECs) serve families of children with disabilities from age three to twenty-two. They were established in Chapter 690 of the Statutes of 2001 (Senate Bill 511, Alpert), enacted as Education Code (EC) 56400-5641. The intent of the Legislature is to ensure that parents, guardians, and families of children and young adults with disabilities have access to accurate information, specialized training, and peer-to-peer support.
Many of the parent organizations that receive FEC grants also receive federal, state, or local funding from other affiliations such as Parent Training and Information Center, Family Resource Center, and varied direct Special Education Local Plan Area (SELPA) or Local Educational Agency (LEA) grants and contracts.
Phone: 831-372-2730
The State Council on Developmental Disabilities is established by state and federal law as an independent state agency to ensure that people with developmental disabilities and their families receive the services and supports they need.
Consumers know best what supports and services they need to live independently and to actively participate in their communities. Through advocacy, capacity building and systemic change, SCDD works to achieve a consumer and family-based system of individualized services, supports, and other assistance. Regional offices serve communities throughout California.
2580 North First Street, Suite 240
San Jose, CA 95131
(408) 324-2106
centralcoast@scdd.ca.gov
Serves: Monterey, San Benito, San Luis Obispo, Santa Barbara, Santa Clara, Santa Cruz, Ventura Counties
Carmel Unified School District Child Development Program
Carmel Unified School District Child Development Program provides early care and education services to approximately 150 children and families in 13 classrooms across 3 sites. These services include full-day infant and full-and part-day toddler classrooms, and full- and part-day State Preschool and tuition-based preschool and transitional kindergarten options. The Child Development Program is an inclusive program—approximately 15% of enrolled children have active Individualized Education Plans.
The Child Development Program began implementing the Teaching Pyramid in 2013 and joined the Partner Site program in 2018. The program Leadership Team has built the Teaching Pyramid framework into their program in a variety of ways. They have an Authorized Trainer and an Authorized Coach on their staff to provide ongoing training and coaching for teachers. They have included regular Teaching Pyramid planning time as a standing agenda item in staff meetings and use the Classroom Pacing Guide to ensure maintenance of Teaching Pyramid lessons and activities. They conduct Teaching Pyramid for Families groups for parents each year, so that families can learn and use Teaching Pyramid strategies at home. They have shared their work in Webinars and in the annual Symposium. These efforts have paid off for their program. They report high levels of teacher buy-in and ownership and they have achieved very high implementation fidelity scores in Teaching Pyramid Observation Tool assessments in all of their classrooms and over time.