B.C. child-care wage campaign could pit workers against parents
Georgia Straight
April 7, 2009
By Pieta Woolley

Tired of waiting for the provincial government to help increase their wages, B.C.’s child-care workers are asking their employers for starting wages of $20 an hour.

Currently, 35 percent of licensed group workers make between $13 and $15 an hour. Another 28 percent make $16 to $18 an hour. According to Sheila Davidson, the executive director of Early Childhood Educators of B.C., the industry is plagued by recruitment and retention problems.

While Davidson told the Georgia Straight that the professional association’s campaign is not meant to burden parents, they may ultimately foot the bill. The ECEBC is encouraging early childhood educators to ask for more money. The boards and bosses then have to figure out where to get it from, Davidson said.

“We can’t subsidize parent fees anymore,” Davidson said in a phone interview today (April 7). “Parents should not have to pay, and this is not about us and them....The worst thing is this is going to hurt some families. Some can’t afford higher fees. But we can stay where we have been for 35 years, or we can say, ‘This is what I’m worth as a professional.’”

The best-case scenario for the ECEBC would see parents step up and force the government to properly fund childcare. That could, and should, take 10 years, Davidson said, if it were to create a well-thought-out system…

“Think of our gang problem,” she said. “Maybe if we’d paid attention to these kids when they were little, and we’d been paying attention to the families who were under such incredible stress, we wouldn’t be in this state. Incarceration is incredibly expensive.”

For the May 12 provincial election, Davidson said concerned citizens should vote for a party that articulates a vision for early childhood learning, and has a concrete plan. Plus, that plan should be legislated, she said. Any plan should include childcare that is affordable, high quality, and accessible, she said…