BC Parents to pay more for daycare
Peace Arch News
By Tom Fletcher
Black Press
Jan 09 2007
VICTORIA - B.C. parents getting the federal child
care benefit will soon have to pay about half of it toward
higher fees for daycare.
The Conservative government launched its Universal Child
Care Benefit last year, paying $100 a month to parents of
pre-school children. That program replaces the 2005 federal-provincial
subsidy program for licensed daycares, which expires in March.
Faced with a loss of $455 million in federal funds over the
next three years, Linda Reid, B.C.'s minister of state
for child care, sent a letter to daycare owners reminding
them that as of July 1, provincial operating funds for licenced
non-profit daycares go back to 2005 levels.
To make up the difference, daycares will have to raise fees
by $2 per child, per day.
Reid said with full-time daycare of 20 days a month, the
increase will be about $40 per month. B.C. parents receive
about $80 a month from Ottawa after taxes, she said.
"Certainly we are going to hope the $100 families receive
directly from the federal government for child care, that
some of that can go toward offsetting the costs of maintaining
the child care program," Reid said.
Heidi Briggs, director of South Surrey's Seaview Childcare
Centre, said she hadn't heard about the funding cuts
and was shocked. She added there's no guarantee parents
will use the federal child care subsidy on daycare.
"You're giving them money to spend on anything
- they can buy a barbecue if they want."
"I'm very worried," agreed Danuta Drygalska,
owner of Evergreen Child Care Centre in White Rock.
Drygalska said she hasn't told parents about the funding
cut - which she will have to offset by raising fees
- because she doesn't want to scare them. Many
have trouble paying for daycare as it is.
"We have families who are sending two kids and paying
$1,200 per month. If they have to pay more, how will they
afford it?"
Child care policy could become an issue again with a possible
federal election in 2007. Paying parents directly instead
of subsidizing institutional daycare was popular for Prime
Minister Stephen Harper, but critics say the shortage of licensed
daycare spaces is likely to worsen.
Claire Trevena, child care critic for the B.C. NDP, said
B.C. Liberals are not only cutting funding, they are capping
the program to build and fund new daycare spaces.
"Child care providers have been looking for a comprehensive
plan for provincial child care, and instead the government
has dismissed this essential service," she said.
Both the B.C. and federal governments argue they are spending
more overall, not less. The federal payments go to all parents.
In October 2005, the B.C. government increased the income
threshold to qualify for daycare subsidies from $21,000 to
$38,000 a year.
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