No Tory child-care plan as parents face long waits,
rising fees
Jan 22, 2007
By: SUE BAILEY
11:30 AM News radio
EXCERPT
OTTAWA (CP) - There's no federal help in sight for frazzled
parents facing years on waiting lists for child care.
One year after the Conservatives won power on a platform
touting 125,000 new spaces over five years, there isn't even
a clear plan on how to create them. And there's uncertainty
mixed with alarm across Canada over looming fee increases
and program cuts since the Tories dropped the $5-billion Liberal
plan to build a national early learning system. "They're really
over a barrel," said Monica Lysack, executive director of
the Child Care Advocacy Association of Canada.
"They don't have a plan. They haven't created a space. Parents
are being caught in the middle of this cut-and-run approach."
Conservatives are handing out cheques worth $1,200 a year
(minus taxes) for each child under six. But they're running
from the fact that there are registered spaces for fewer than
20 per cent of kids under 12, Lysack said.
Parents - regardless of income - have received $1.2 billion
since the first payments were mailed in July, according to
the government. "Great," said Lysack. "But it's not child
care. Even they acknowledge that." In British Columbia and
Ontario, it's not unusual for waiting lists to stretch to
more than two years for a pre-school spot.
The Conservatives committed $250 million in last year's budget
to create new spaces in 2007-08. But their tax-incentive plan
to lure employers and non-profit groups into the costly and
bureaucratic child-care business has been widely panned. Similar
efforts in Ontario under the former Mike Harris Tories failed
badly when corporations didn't bite.
Former social development minister Diane Finley held talks
with child-care groups last summer and was to draft space-creation
recommendations by the fall. The report has still not been
released.
Monte Solberg ... was not available for comment Monday.
Prime Minister Stephen Harper has conceded that his government's
approach may need tweaking. Still, one of his first acts in
power was to cancel $5 billion in promised Liberal child-care
funding as of March 31, 2007.
Provinces had banked on having that cash for another three
years.
The Ontario government lost $1.4 billion and has been left
hanging, said Mary Anne Chambers, the province's minister
for child and family services.
"By September of last year we created 15,000 new spaces
- a clear indication of the demand," she said.
The province had hoped to add 25,000 spots, but even that
would have filled just one-quarter of pent-up needs, Chambers
said.
"Not all parents want this, obviously, but the majority
say they need it."
Sara Landriault ... represents Fund the Child. The group
wants Ottawa to offer more tax credits and income-geared help
that will give parents more child-care choice.
Kathy Graham, head of the Association of Day Care Operators
of Ontario, agrees that fiscal policies geared to helping
families afford quality care are key to easing what she calls
a growing "crisis."
Provincial and federal funds should be used to stabilize
and expand already existing centres, and to increase "pitifully
low" staff salaries that still hover below $10 an hour on
average, she said....
Provinces that blame the federal Conservatives for child-care
cuts, as the B.C. government recently did, should be held
to account, Graham added. "Too many provinces are not putting
any of their own additional money into stabilizing child care.
It's children who are becoming the pawns in this political
game."
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