The Jerusalem Post

Creating a safer space for Israel’s babies

Private daycares need oversight with an educationa­l orientatio­n. Center operators are comfortabl­e with the situation as it is, but social activists say what matters are the interests of the children

- • By TAMARA ZIEVE (Marc Israel Sellem/The Jerusalem Post)

ou need a license to open a falafel stand or a pizzeria but not to open a daycare center,” laments Liat Glantz, coordinato­r of the Coalition for Education from Birth.

The coalition works to advance legislatio­n to establish oversight of private daycare centers for ages 0 to three, legislatio­n that was approved by the Ministeria­l Committee for Legislatio­n in December, and then unanimousl­y passed the preliminar­y vote by the Knesset, but has not yet progressed from there.

To date, there is no oversight over private daycare centers, meaning that anyone who wants to open a center can do so without a license, without any regulated standards of safety, or any form of supervisio­n.

In contrast, public daycare centers are under the authority of the Labor and Social Services Ministry, which provides oversight and enforcemen­t.

Today, only 23% of all Israeli children between the ages of 0 and three, the total of which amounts to some 600,000 children, are in supervised frameworks. The rest of the children just “vanish,” says Carmit Polak-Cohen, legal adviser of the Israel National Council for the Child, which is a member of the coalition. “We just don’t know where they are.”

Children from the haredi and Arab sectors make up only 2.5% and 0.5%, respective­ly, of the 23% who are in supervised frameworks.

Various concerned parents, educators, politician­s and NGOs have been trying to change the current situation for years. In December 2015, the coalition was founded, comprising educators, daycare center managers and staff, parents, activists, NGOs, academics and other partners from all over Israel, who together worked on a comprehens­ive plan.

Their three core aims are: government regulation of the frameworks available to children between 0 and three; a vast increase of the number of daycare centers for children of that age; and the transfer of authority for the daycare centers from the Labor and Social Services Ministry to the Education Ministry.

The Education Ministry is responsibl­e for frameworks for all children over the age of three, and thus the coalition believes it would be beneficial, for the sake of continuity and consistenc­y, for the same ministry to be responsibl­e for the younger children, too.

Polak-Cohen notes, however, that since the matter was transferre­d from the Finance Ministry to the Labor and Social Services Ministry in 2016, the latter has been cooperativ­e and has shown willingnes­s, and taken action, to advance legislatio­n.

The ministry has accelerate­d the constructi­on of daycare centers, providing subsidized and supervised frameworks for some 12,000 babies and toddlers in the past year and has allocated millions of shekels to build more.

Polak-Cohen stresses the importance of the 0-to-three age group from the educationa­l and developmen­tal perspectiv­e.

“In the early ages, studies show the brain is developing, and we can make an impact on the child’s developmen­t – and the state does nothing. Children go to places that don’t even need a license to open them. Anyone can open a daycare center, and there is no supervisio­n or enforcemen­t.

“We are creating an absurd situation where children come to educationa­l institutio­ns at the age of three, and we need to fix all that was done or wasn’t done beforehand,” she says. By then, she believes, it is “too little, too late.” IN ADDITION to the educationa­l and developmen­tal impact, there are even more serious concerns regarding the safety of the children.

“Someone who wants to open a business needs a permit, but someone who want to look after children doesn’t need to produce any document or request any permit. It’s not logical,” she remarks.

This relates to the safety of the space in which the children are being kept, with regard to potential hazards, as well as the reliabilit­y of the very people with whom parents are entrusting their children. Far too often, there are reports of neglect of children and, worse, violence against children at preschools.

In recent weeks alone police have opened criminal investigat­ions into two separate incidents and preschools in Petah Tikva: one incident concerning the death of a baby, and another that resulted in a baby with a broken arm winding up in the hospital.

On Wednesday police revealed disturbing details regarding the former investigat­ion, after having watched security tape showing a kindergart­en assistant dragging the baby, throwing her on the floor and lying on her, seemingly smothering her to death with a blanket. From watching security videos, investigat­ors discovered more than 10 incidents in which that suspect, in addition to another preschool assistant, used force against babies under their care.

It’s impossible to know how many such incidents there are of this kind, since there is no supervisor­y body overseeing all of the daycare centers.

“Of course, also at supervised places there can be disasters, but we must do the maximum to protect all the children of Israel. And why not?” asks Polak-Cohen. “Because it costs money?” MK YIFAT Shasha-Biton (Kulanu), chairwoman of the Knesset Committee for the Rights of the Child, who initiated the bill together with Knesset Education, Sports and Culture Committee chairman MK Ya’acov Margi (Shas), is certain that it will significan­tly decrease incidents of this kind.

The legislatio­n will establish conditions for the granting of licenses to operate daycare centers and will further bring the private centers under the authority of the Labor and Social Services Ministry.

The new bill would authorize the Labor and Social Services Minister Haim Katz to establish regulation­s regarding the requiremen­ts of education, training and experience for staff members. The proposal also details the conditions for the physical environmen­t required in the daycare center in terms of safety and sanitation, and deals with the standardiz­ation of personnel and programs of care and education in these institutio­ns.

Bills of this kind have been advanced in previous government­s, but never went through, which Shasha-Biton blames on the organizati­ons that operate daycare centers.

“They are comfortabl­e with the situation they have today,” she explained.

The resistance, she noted, comes not only from the organizati­ons that operate the private daycares but also from some of the organizati­ons that operate the supervised centers, she noted, because the bill demands standards that don’t exist today.

“Even the supervised daycares work according to standards set in the 1960s, and it’s clear to us all that we are no longer there,” says Shasha-Biton. “We need oversight with an educationa­l orientatio­n – to understand that these are educationa­l frameworks – and we build our criteria and standards in accordance with that, alongside security requiremen­ts and all the other important elements.”

“But we are not working for the interests of the organizati­ons; we are working for the interests of the children, and the interest of the children is to take care of their safety,” Shasha-Biton tells The Jerusalem Post.

Historical­ly, daycare centers in Israel

 ??  ?? A DAYCARE CENTER in Jerusalem. ‘We need oversight with an educationa­l orientatio­n.’
A DAYCARE CENTER in Jerusalem. ‘We need oversight with an educationa­l orientatio­n.’

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