Two WCC programs threatened: Spring Creek infant, toddler streams face closure unless staff shortage is resolved
Whistler Question
Megan Grittani-Livingston
October 16, 2008
WHISTLER – The crippling shortage of qualified staff could force the Whistler Children’s Centre (WCC) to shut down its two infant and toddler programs at the WCC’s Spring Creek campus.
… WCC Society officials announced last week that the child care service would have to temporarily stop taking on new families, because it doesn’t have enough B.C.-certified Early Childhood Educators (ECEs), especially those with the Infant-Toddler specialization.
The shortage is a problem throughout the field, the province and the corridor, Gaudet said, but Whistler feels the effects keenly because of the high cost of living here and the lack of affordable housing.
The WCC needs to hire several new ECEs, including at least one with the Infant-Toddler concentration for each program, to keep the two Spring Creek programs open.
Paula Palmer, mother of a two-year-old son who has been cared for at Spring Creek for about 18 months, said the news was distressing, and particularly challenging as the ski season approaches, and that the families will have to struggle to find new child care or work options.
Palmer said the Spring Creek parents have been firing emails back and forth about options since they were told about the impending closure, as well as contacting licensing officials and local, provincial and federal politicians about the situation.
“We’re all on board, and we’re all trying to deal with it… we’re all trying to do it together,” she said.
Palmer said Spring Creek parents have suggested alternatives to the closure such as some daycare sharing between the Nesters location and Spring Creek, to ensure everyone has some child care.
…. Though the staff shortage is widespread, Gaudet said the WCC is working hard to attract new ECEs, by contacting “every resource we can think of,” talking to a few qualified educators in the community who might be available for short-term solutions, and approaching officials at child care centres in Squamish and Pemberton.
“But everyone in the corridor is in the same boat,” Gaudet said.
While the struggle for short-term solutions continues, Gaudet said it’s important for everyone to get involved in advocating for child care, to motivate political leaders to make the systemic changes needed for long-term solutions.
Child care should be important to everyone because there’s a “huge trickle-down effect” from problems such as the WCC’s, Gaudet said. Parents have said they might have to leave the Whistler workforce to care for their kids, or move out of Whistler entirely, Gaudet said.
“I think the effects can be drastic and everyone must be in realization of that,” she said.
Lisa St-Amand, whose two-year-old daughter who loves her time at the Spring Creek daycare, said she thinks legislative changes are necessary across the province to repair the state of the ECE field and the hurdles in the licensing process for educators with out-of-province certifications.
She and her husband work in Whistler, having been part of the community since 1994, but they live in Squamish. If they can’t find child-care solutions beyond temporary help from grandparents, St-Amand said, “we may have to change our working scenario.”
Gaudet encouraged concerned community members to contact municipal political candidates, the federal government, provincial MLA Joan McIntyre and Linda Reid, the B.C. Minister of State for Child Care. Palmer, St-Amand and many of the other Spring Creek parents have already done so, they said.
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