Penticton Herald

Daycare a major concern for parents

- By JORDAN PRESS

OTTAWA — Daycare fees have dropped — or barely inched up — in some Canadian cities in what might be early signs of the influence of federal child-care money, a new survey says.

The fifth annual survey of child care fees from the Canadian Centre for Policy Alternativ­es being released Thursday says that fees for fulltime, regulated child-care spaces have risen faster than inflation in 61 per cent of cities reviewed.

The left-leaning think tank found that costs were the highest in Toronto and the surroundin­g area, where fees for children under 18 months average $1,685, and $1,150 a month for older preschoole­rs.

Cities in Quebec had the lowest fees for fulltime, regulated spaces across the country, followed by Winnipeg and Charlottet­own — in the three provinces that have fixed fees for years.

The federal treasury is set to spend $7.5 billion over a decade to help fund child-care spaces across the country, with the money flowing through one-on-one agreements with provinces.

The first three years of spending will be $1.3 billion and potentiall­y create or maintain 40,000 subsidized spaces, a target the Liberals say is on its way to being achieved. Once the three years are up — after this year’s federal election — new funding deals will have to be signed.

David Macdonald, a senior economist at the Canadian Centre for Policy Alternativ­es, said he expected that government policy aimed at lowering fees will lead to an overall decrease in prices for the first time in five years.

“For the survey that we’ve been doing, it’s just been fees going up every year, year after year, far more than the rate of inflation and we’re seeing fees actually start to go in reverse in a couple of the provinces,” Macdonald said.

He says the initial federal spending appears to have helped provinces moving to regulate the prices parents pay for child care.

The federal Liberals didn’t expect provinces to set lower fees when it signed funding agreements with all of them last year, but did envision that provincial government­s — which are responsibl­e for child care — would find ways to make daycare more affordable for those who need it.

A set-fee regime in St. John’s, N.L., led to a 13-per-cent decline in the fees parents pay, the report says, even though the costs still remain similar to those found in Ottawa, where the rates are set by the market. Reductions were also noted in Edmonton where the provincial NDP has rolled out government-supported $25a-day daycare.

“There’s a measurable effect,” Macdonald said of federal funding.

“While federal money is certainly flowing out, it in all cases supported pre-existing provincial efforts”

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