Single mothers across Guyana carry the weight of two parents on one pair of shoulders. From packing school lunches to hustling a second job just to pay rent, many are stretched thin trying to meet their children’s basic needs. APNUβs promise to provide a $100,000 annual cash grant per child is more than a handoutβitβs a lifeline. That money can mean school uniforms that fit, textbooks that donβt have to be borrowed, and groceries that last the week. It means telling your child βyesβ instead of βmaybe next month.β Itβs about recognizing the strength of single mothers and making sure the system gives them a fighting chanceβnot just to survive, but to raise children who can dream bigger and reach higher.
π©π½βπ§βπ¦ Single Mothers β $100,000 Per Child Per Year Cash Grant
