HomeMy WebLinkAboutOntario commits to universally accessible child care - Metro Ottawa - 06/06/2017 - Metro Ottawa - 06/06/20176/7/2017
Ontario commits to universally accessible child care
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A five-year action plan to be released Tuesday will move Ontario towards a "bold step forward":
a universally accessible child-care system.
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By: Staff Torstar News Services, Published on Tue Jun 06 2017
Ontario is about to become the first province outside Quebec committed to creating affordable
child-care spaces for all parents who want them, according to an ambitious new vision to be
released Tuesday.
"This renewed framework is a bold step forward," said Indira Naidoo-Harris, minister
responsible for early years and child care, in a statement to child care advocates. "It contains a
ground -breaking set of initiatives that will help us continue to transform the early years and
child-care system."
The government's goal to build a "universally accessible" child-care system in Ontario sets out
seven action areas for the next five years, including itsIpimvi(u )u§y a irilir ouri(x)(1 to double
capacity for kids under age 4, by adding 100,000 licensed spots in homes, schools and
community settings by 2022.
Other action areas include focusing expansion in the public and non-profit sectors, developing
strategies to address affordability and the child-care workforce, boosting inclusion for children
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6/7/2017
Ontario commits to universally accessible child care
with special needs and drafting a provincial definition of quality in early -years programs for kids
up to age 12.
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Increased public education and awareness of the initiative will be supported through a new
government website and annual progress reports, according to the framework, obtained by the
Star.
Ontario's spring budget earmarked $200 million to create 8,000 new licensed spaces and
about 16,000 new fee subsidies this year while the province develops its broader affordability
strategy.
As part of that strategy, the government will hire an outside expert to help draft a new funding
model to make child-care costs fairer and more affordable for all families.
Ontario parents pay among the highest child-care fees in the country, with Toronto families
shelling out the most at up to $20,000 a year for a licensed spot, according to a national report
on the issue last fall.
A recent city of Toronto study noted that three-quarters of local families ca irl't: a aloud Illiiceim ed
clhillld a:caire. Middle-income parents are most disadvantaged because their incomes are too high
to qualify for fee subsidies but too low to afford the staggering cost of licensed care, the study
found.
The workforce strategy is aimed at improving wages and working conditions so college- and
university-trained early childhood educators are no longer among the lowest -paid professionals
in the province and that they don't leave the field for better -paying jobs.
A $2 -an -hour wage enhancement grant introduced in 2015 will continue while the workforce
strategy is developed, the framework says.
About 24 per cent of registered early childhood educators working in licensed child care earn
less than $15 an hour, according to the Association of Early Childhood Educators of Ontario.
Child-care advocates greeted the provincial vision with optimism and excitement.
"For the first time in many years, it feels like positive changes in child care can happen across
Canada," said Toronto-based child-care expert Martha Friendly of the Childcare Resource and
Research Unit.
"The comprehensive system -building approach is what we have long recommended," she said.
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6/7/2017
Ontario commits to universally accessible child care
"With the affordability and workforce strategies as centrepieces and other key elements such
as inclusion and expansion in the not-for-profit sector front and centre, I'm very excited about
working with the child-care community, researchers and the provincial government on all this,"
she added.
A spokeswoman for the Child Care Advocacy Association of Canada said Ontario's action plan
contains "all the key pieces" to build a universally accessible system that will serve all parents
who need care, regardless of their family circumstances, geography or income.
"We think this is exactly what needs to happen across the country," said Morna Ballantyne.
"It's exciting that this is happening. And we hope it's the kind of approach that will be replicated
by other provinces," she added.
Business leaders also praised the initiative.
Richard Koroscil, interim president and CEO of the Ontario Chamber of Commerce, said it will
help business by making it easier for new parents to return to work. Koroscil also lauded the
government's new support for home-based child-care providers, a measure he said would
create "more opportunity for people to create their own child-care businesses."
As i) :% l liar tJlwe Stair Monday, the plan will provide new funding to non-profit home child-care
agencies to make it more affordable for home daycare operators to join the licensed system.
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A new focus on data collection and annual reporting on the government's progress will begin
this fall, as part of a five-year "outcomes and measurement strategy" for the emerging new
child-care system, the framework says.
And an updated government website, to be available in 2018, will give parents a "one-stop
hub" to help them navigate Ontario's early -years system.
About 2,100 people attended public consultations and more than 6,000 responded to an online
survey about the framework last winter. Parents in cities said they can't access licensed child
care because it is too expensive while those in rural areas said centres are too far away. Shift
workers said they need programs that provide weekend and evening care.
As part of the framework, a new innovation fund will help grow the non-profit sector and
support different child-care models to serve families with irregular work hours or those living in
small communities.
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6/7/2017
Ontario commits to universally accessible child care
Ontario currently spends more than $1 billion a year on almost 390,000 licensed child-care
spaces for children up to age 12, including about 72,000 in Toronto.
But those spaces serve only about one-quarter of Ontario's children at a time when more than
75 per cent of young mothers are in the workforce. Across the province, barely one in five
children under age 4 have access to licensed child care. The government's five-year expansion
plan aims to double the number of spaces for this age group to 40 per cent.
Just over 26,360 children in low- to moderate -income families in Toronto have access to fee
subsidies that bring daily costs down from an average of $83 to under $8. But lack of funding
means more than 14,000 children are on the subsidy wait list as of June 1.
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