City Hall looks at child-care involvement
By IRWIN LOY, 24 HOURS
Oct 6, 2006
Vancouver's city council looks to be taking on a bigger
role in child care, as question marks are raised over the
federal government's commitment.
Council will be examining the feasibility of implementing
a city-wide, child-care endowment fund. The current $6-million
endowment now partially subsidizes about 144 crucial infant/toddler
spots - about 30 per cent of the available spots in the city.
"I have the luxury of having my parents take care of my children,"
said Vision Vancouver Coun. Raymond Louie, who introduced
the idea. "Many people don't have that."
But the current endowment is unsustainable, and will be drained
without a cash injection, as reported by 24 hours last week.
The city plans on asking the province to match the $6 million.
The move would make the endowment sustainable, and also nearly
double its capacity.
B.C. has about $127 million in as-yet unallocated bilateral
transfers received from the federal government as part of
the 2005 child-care agreement. The Conservatives have said
they'll axe the deal in 2007, however.
Child care is not normally the domain of municipalities.
But Vancouver increased its subsidy program after the province
cut its own child-care budget by $40 million in 2002.
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