Crisis
or not, let's solve daycare issue
Abbotsford Times
December 14, 2007
Opinion
Numbers don't lie. And neither do politicians - right?
But in the case of Abbotsford's daycare crisis, something's
got to give….
Both Mike de Jong and John van Dongen say they understand how
frustrating it can be for parents trying to find child care
in Abbotsford, and both pointed to several programs their government
has funded that are intended to help in addressing daycare problems.
We don't deny our government spends a lot, especially with rising
health care costs, the 2010 Olympic Games on the way, and a
huge overrun - more than $880 million - on the Vancouver Trade
and Convention Centre to pay for.
The federal government didn't help at all when it pulled a plan
to create more child care spaces, which would have meant $356
million for Abbotsford.
If you look at the B.C. government website, it will tell you
the province plans to invest $287 million for child care services
this year. But check out a report from UBC's Early Learning
and Child Care Research unit, and that tells you our government
set aside $377 million for child care programs in 2006/07 -
and only about $273 million has actually been allocated toward
such programs.
The government did increase child care subsidy rates as well
as the threshold, but the UBC study points to the more than
$100 million in confirmed federal transfers for this year that
has not been put toward child care.
This daycare crisis - whether you define it as one or not -
can't be blamed on any one individual, group or government.
That's why all levels of government - and the entire community
- need to get on this and start working toward a realistic solution. |