The Peterborough Examiner

Education workers scramble for child care

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TORONTO — Thousands of Ontario education workers set to go back to school next week amid a provincewi­de lockdown are facing impossible choices, a union representi­ng them argued Friday as it warned many don’t have proper child-care options available to support their return to work.

Elementary school classes will run remotely from Jan. 4 to 8 as part of the ongoing effort to curb the spread of COVID-19. But custodial, maintenanc­e and clerical staff are among thousands of workers expected to physically report to work while students take classes online, according to the Canadian Union of Public Employees.

CUPE, which represents a wide variety of education workers, said many of its 20,000 members slated to return to school next week are parents who have been left out of a provision offering child-care services to essential workers.

Laura Walton, president of CUPE’s Ontario School Board Council of Unions, said the situation has left people scrambling. “Folks are required to be at a brick and mortar place, and there is no place for their fiveyear-old,” she said Friday. “How does this happen?”

She’s hearing concerns from union members across the province whose schools have asked them to report to work.

Child care will be available during the lockdown, the government has said, except for the period when elementary-aged children are learning at home.

Exceptions have been made for several categories of workers deemed essential, and the union wants the government to include education workers in that child-care provision, especially if elementary school students are kept out of school for longer than one week.

“I think this really shows yet again the failure of this government to talk to the folks that actually do the work before making their plans,” Walton said.

Education Minister Stephen Lecce’s office did not immediatel­y respond to a request for comment.

Walton said the situation isn’t just stressful for parents — it’s potentiall­y dangerous during an increasing­ly dire wave of COVID -19 infections that prompted the lockdown, which came into effect on Dec. 26.

Workers are now considerin­g asking friends and family members from outside their households to look after their children, creating the risk that the virus could spread.

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