Journal Pioneer

Day cares need better oversight: AG

- STU NEATBY

P.E.I.’s auditor general has found that monitoring and inspection of the province’s licensed child care centres has been inadequate.

In her 2019 report to the legislativ­e assembly, auditor general Jane MacAdam found that over 35 per cent of licensed childcare centres tested had not been inspected within a year. The report noted the standard of annual inspection­s is considered good practice in other provinces and by the province’s early learning and child care board.

“We concluded that the ministry of Education, Early Learning and Culture did not adequately monitor and enforce the licensing of early learning and childcare centres,” MacAdam said in a media briefing.

The report found the province’s early learning and childcare board did not have a policy on how often inspection­s should be performed.

The report also found that staff screening documents, such as criminal record checks, were not obtained in 30 per cent of licence approvals examined. These centres were nonetheles­s granted a licence to operate by the province.

In addition, fire inspection documentat­ion was not adequately obtained in 30 per cent of approved centres examined by the auditor general.

“Some licences and renewals were issued before the board received sufficient informatio­n to be satisfied that the centre met the legislativ­e requiremen­ts,” MacAdam stated in the report.

Under the Early Learning and Child Care Act, the minister of Early Learning appoints members to the board that oversees inspection­s of child care centres.

In her report, the auditor general noted that the inspection template establishe­d by the board did not match up with regulation­s. Requiremen­ts around inspection of sanitation, separate cribs for infants, safe storage of medication and adherence of meals and snacks for children to Canada’s Food Guide were not included in the inspection form.

“If key aspects of the regulation­s are not included in the inspection, standards meant to protect the well-being of children under a centre’s care may not be enforced,” the report stated.

Finally, the report noted that in the fiscal year 2017-2018, 39 out of 49 centres with funding contracts greater than $100,000 did not receive authorizat­ion from the province’s Treasury Board.

Among the report’s recommenda­tions were that the board implement policies on frequency of inspection­s, that the inspection forms be updated and that the board clearly identify which violations would result in a failed inspection.

The Guardian requested an interview with Early Learning Minister Jordan Brown, who did not respond by deadline.

Carolyn Simpson, the province’s director for early childhood developmen­t, said the department has begun to act on the recommenda­tions of the auditor general’s report.

“We’ve either acted on each of the recommenda­tions to its completion or we have a plan in place for them all,” Simpson said.

Simpson said inspectors do visual checks of, for example, sanitation of furniture, equipment and food preparatio­n areas. But she said the informatio­n was not recorded on the inspection forms.

“If there were concerns from our perspectiv­e, because we work with two other department­s for inspection­s, we would send that immediatel­y to our health inspector,” Simpson said.

The board is currently updating the forms to meet requiremen­ts of the act, she said.

Sonya Hooper, executive director the Early Childhood Developmen­t Associatio­n of P.E.I., said she believes childcare centres are being properly inspected. But corrective action can be timeconsum­ing.

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