Vancouver Sun

Parents in rural areas face unique challenges

- JENNIFER SALTMAN jensaltman@postmedia.com twitter.com/jensaltman

Parents in B.C.’s small, rural and remote communitie­s have unique challenges when it comes to finding child care, according to a survey conducted by the Union of B.C. Municipali­ties and child-care advocates.

While lack of spaces and high prices are issues felt across the province, those outside urban areas have trouble finding more flexible child care, transporta­tion can be difficult and there is an urgent shortage of qualified child-care staff.

“This puts more of a fine point on what’s happening in small, rural and remote communitie­s that needs to be layered on to the Child Care B.C. plan,” said Sharon Gregson, spokespers­on for the Coalition of Child Care Advocates of B.C., which helped formulate and conduct the survey. “They had some very good ideas I expect government will listen to.”

In its February budget, the provincial government announced its billion-dollar Child Care B.C. plan, which includes the Child Care Fee Reduction Initiative, cutting daycare costs by up to $350 per month per space, and the Affordable Child Care Benefit, which on Sept. 1 will replace the existing Child Care Subsidy for low-income families.

The survey was launched in May and asked local government­s about their child-care needs. Staff and elected officials from 62 local government­s responded.

“I know they have some of the same issues they have in larger centres, but we believe they do have unique challenges,” said Wendy Booth, president of the Union of B.C. Municipali­ties.

“The goal of the report is really to add to the discussion on child care that’s been ongoing for a long time.”

The vast majority of survey respondent­s, 92 per cent, said it was difficult to find quality, affordable and accessible child care.

Most (53 per cent) said the biggest challenge is the availabili­ty of spaces and providers in communitie­s. In some communitie­s there are significan­t waiting lists and in others there is no licensed child care at all. A lack of qualified staff is the second-biggest challenge, according to 15 per cent of respondent­s, who noted that wages for early childhood educators are low.

Those in the Peace River communitie­s told surveyors that child-care operators compete for workers with the resource sector (forestry, oil and gas and the Site C dam project), and wages for those in that sector, even in food service, are high compared with wages for early childhood educators.

“When people earn more money working at the Tim Hortons than working in child care, it is very difficult to keep staff in child care,” Gregson said.

 ?? ARLEN REDEKOP/FILES ?? Sharon Gregson of the Coalition of Child Care Advocates says a new UBCM survey has many ideas that B.C. should consider.
ARLEN REDEKOP/FILES Sharon Gregson of the Coalition of Child Care Advocates says a new UBCM survey has many ideas that B.C. should consider.

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