Category-complete census of the Coachella Valley's family-education, childcare, and youth-development layer. 216 organizations, eight subcategories, 4,685,224 tokens across discovery and six enrichment batches.
AICV published a category-complete census of the Coachella Valley's family-education, childcare, and youth-development layer — 216 organizations across eight subcategories and twelve communities. Every organization individually inspected across discovery and six enrichment batches.
216 enrichment agents, 4,685,224 tokens across discovery and six enrichment batches. Model stack: Sonnet for breadth and discovery, Opus for mapping and orchestration. Full sidecars on disk — the most complete provenance record of any census in the series.
70% of the category falls into subcategories where no state credential exists to check — tutoring centers, youth programs, enrichment providers. Structured data appears on 3.1% of sites. More than four in five organizations display no price where an agent looks.
The family and schooling category has a specific trust problem for agents: it's the category where parents most want credential verification before a referral, and it's the one where the regulatory framework provides it least. An agent trying to route a family to childcare or youth enrichment in the valley has almost no structured surface to work from.
The category-complete map exists now. 216 organizations, individually inspected, with subcategory and community breakdowns. The finding is that the trust infrastructure parents expect — credentials, pricing, structured contact — is largely absent from the category's digital layer.