B.C. pledges $5M to expand day-care spaces, but
advocate says too little
Terri Theodore
Vancouver
27 Jul 04
The B.C. government will spend almost $5 million to expand
day-care spaces in the province and improve other child-care
programs, but a child-care advocate says it's only a tiny
fraction of the money the Liberals have cut from such services.
Christy Clark, minister of Children and Families, said $1
million will go to create 200 new child-care spaces in eight
centres. Another $2 million will go to upgrade other centres
and help them create more spaces, while $1.7 million will
be spent to allow non-working families to send their kids
to pre-school, a move that will affect about 2,000 kids.
"We know all children can benefit from early childhood education
and we are providing non-working parents with access to programs
that help prepare children for school," said Clark.
"This is one step of many our government intends to take
over the next few months to improve early childhood and child
care programs."
But Sharon Gregson, of the Coalition of Childcare Advocates
of British Columbia, said the money comes from a federal-provincial
fund. She said the Liberals have cut $42 million from the
province's child-care budget.
"What's happening right now is federal funds are coming to
all of the provinces and unfortunately, B.C. is using federal
funds to replace provincial cuts and not even at the amount
they've been cutting.
"This announcement is certainly a relief, but it's encouragement,
not praise, at this point."
Clark, however, disputes Gregson's claims.
The minister said in 2001 the budget spent was $180 million.
This year, it is $172 million and will be $182 million in
2005.
"Those are what advocates would recognize as the actual child
care spending numbers," Clark said. "That doesn't include
the addition $50 million we're spending on early childhood
development and all of those other array of services that
are really important for the early learning years that don't
happen in child-care centres."
Gregson said only between 10 and 12 per cent of children
have access to licensed child-care spaces.
What's needed, she said, is a five-year plan to ensure quality
child care is available without the shortage of spaces that
currently exists.
Clark readily admits there were cuts, changes that had to
be made to get the province's fiscal house in order. In child
care, she said the government had to limit access to such
care to control spending.
"We made some really difficult decisions over the last three
years," she said. "We're starting to put that back now."
Clark said the province has set aside $1 million to supplement
the operating funding for more than 600 licensed child-care
centres that provide before and after school care.
Another $700,000 will enhance funding to register non-licensed
child-care providers that meet safety and training requirements.
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