Child-care fund runs short of dough
By Irwin Loy
24 HOURS
A City of Vancouver child-care pot that funds 144 spaces
locally will be drained without a big cash injection.
The city's child-care endowment reserve provides subsidies
that fund almost 30 per cent of Vancouver's 500 licensed group
infant/toddler spaces.
"What it does is it helps offset the cost of the operating
costs of running these spots," said Carol Ann Young, the city's
acting director of social planning.
But the $5.8 million reserve is not self-sustaining and will
be depleted by 2025. City staff have suggested the provincial
government match the funds.
Another $6 million would make the reserve self-sustaining,
while also providing enough money for another 132 spots.
City council will be asked to petition the province next
week, but the minister responsible for child care, Linda Reid,
was non-committal yesterday.
"We currently directly subsidize families," Reid told 24
hours. "I'm not sure we would take that direct subsidy option
and provide the money to municipalities."
The province gives child care subsidies to 25,000 families.
Child care is not traditionally the domain of municipalities.
In 2002, a $40-million cut to B.C.'s child-care budget caused
the city to boost its own child-care subsidies.
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