City backs child care: Council joins campaign to
push for federal funding
Burnaby Now
07 Jun 2006
By: Dan Hilborn
EXCERPT
Burnaby city council is joining the Code Blue campaign in
an attempt to get the new Conservative government to live
up to earlier Liberal government's commitments on child care.
The campaign... calls on Ottawa to honour its commitment
to earlier federal-provincial cost-sharing agreements to build
new child-care spaces.
In a report from the city's social issues committee, council
was told that the cancellation of the 2005 agreements could
result in the loss of funding for child-care programs.
Representatives from the city's child-care resources and
referral program told the committee that there were only 3,171
licensed child-care spaces in Burnaby as of June 2005 and
an average of 200 calls per month from parents seeking their
services.
The report also pointed to statistics from the 2001 census
that indicate Burnaby has 11,460 children between the ages
of zero and five years old, with another 14,670 children between
the ages of six and 12 years.
Council was also told that there is a waiting list for every
child-care centre in Burnaby.
According to the report, the child-care workers' biggest
fear is that the provincial government might cut back its
funding of child-care programs as a result of the cancellation
of the 2005 federal-provincial agreements.
Council will send a letter to the prime minister and Burnaby's
members of Parliament, asking them to honour the earlier agreements
and to take other steps to "maintain and enhance" the child-care
system in Canada.
Council will also send letters to the premier and Burnaby's
MLAs, urging them to continue current levels of funding for
child care, irrespective of the federal government's response....
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