Child
care chaos July 1
Cariboo Press -- Quesnel Cariboo Observer
June 17, 2007
Letters by: Coalition of Child Care Advocates of B.C.
Editor:
Open letter to Minister Linda Reid.
July 1, 2007, the day on which your government will cut child
care operating funds for licensed family and group child care
programs across B.C. is fast approaching.
As the date draws closer, we are hearing from our community
across B.C. about families facing impossible choices, caregivers
despairing after years of dedicated service and organizations
unable to yet again find a way to make do.
There are no organizational reserves or cost savings to cover
the loss of CCOF. The child care community is already underfunded
and reeling form years of instability. The sector is in the
midst of a human resource crisis as current wages are too low
to recruit and maintain quality early childhood educators.
So, as advised by you, child care fees across B.C. are going
up. For infant/ toddler care, increases of $75 a month are needed
just to cover CCOF cuts let alone improve wages or meet other
escalating operating costs. Total monthly fees for children
under three could now be over $1,000 month. More families will
have no choice but to remove their children from licensed care
and scramble to find alternatives. Other families will have
to leave the labour force or reduce their working hours deepening
B.C.’s growing labour shortage and ongoing concerns about
family poverty. Children, families and the whole community will
pay the cost for years to come.
Again, you rationalize this away by saying that families should
use the taxable family allowance they receive from the federal
government to pay higher child care fees. Yet, other early learning
programs that you fund, including Family Resource Programs where
parents must attend with their children, are free. Even though
all families get the federal allowance, only working families
who need child care are being punished by your government.
You blame the cuts on the loss of dedicated federal child care
transfer payments saying that you had no choice but to spend
$95 million in remaining federal child care funds on one-time-only
grants rather than ongoing funding for CCOF. But B.C.’s
outgoing acting Auditor General and the current Comptroller
General have both publicly confirmed that the province has the
ability to make decisions about child care spending this year
and beyond. It is revealing that B.C. is the only province to
cut ongoing child care funds while engaging in a flurry of unaccountable
year end spending in response to the reduction in dedicated
federal funds. And even without federal funds, B.C. has the
money it needs to sustain CCOF. B.C.’s expected surplus
for 2006/07 is $3 billion. All that’s lacking is the political
will to allocate a mere $15 million to at least maintain current
CCOF levels let alone begin to build the child care system B.C.
needs.
We know that you have heard these arguments before from thousand
of British Columbians. To date, you have not listened. On behalf
of the children, families, child care providers and communities
in B.C., the Coalition of Child Care Advocates of B.C. is making
one last call to reason. Act now to stop the slated July 1 cuts
to CCOF or expect to be held accountable for the chaos that
will follow. |