The Guardian Australia

If coronaviru­s forces childcare services to close for good, parents will be left stranded

- Lisa Bryant

Parents are withdrawin­g their children from education and care in droves. They are doing it because they are concerned for their children and because they are told to keep children home if possible. But mostly they are doing it because childcare is expensive. When families lose their income, childcare is an obvious place to cut.

But once families pull out, the government subsidies that fund wages and rent for childcare centres go, which forces our education and care centres to close their doors eventually.

They have been told they have

to stay open to care for the children

of essential workers and for children whose parents are working from home and can’t work with a toddler underfoot. But the centres can no longer afford to stay open.

Northside Community Services runs five long day cares in Canberra. Their executive director, Anna Whitty, puts it this way:

The ex-director of an out of school hours care service in Western Australia says:

Goodstart Early Learning, one of Australia’s largest providers, had to lay off 4,000 casual educators last week.

Melinda Gambley is the director of a state-funded preschool in northern New South Wales.

She says:

Unlike schools, childcare services are not actually government funded.

Instead, parents pass on to centres the subsidies they receive and pay the gap fees.

On top of this convoluted method of funding, successive government­s have increasing­ly privatised the whole gig. Our long day cares are now as likely to be run by large corporate providers and small businesses. Our out-of-school hours services are either owned by multinatio­nal private equity firms, or they are not-for-profit, or parent run. There is also no clear constituti­onal divide as to who should fund services either – the states or the commonweal­th – which adds to the complexity.

The childcare subsidy is a dog’s

breakfast of rules and legislatio­n. One of the last days that parliament sat, it passed changes to give the government some outs to this. But until services are actually closed, no funds are available. Services can’t even remove the gap fees for parents without committing fraud.

The government opened a small grant program and now has to process over 14,000 applicatio­ns. This won’t happen fast. There are ways for parents to claim higher subsidies, but these all involve myGov.

The educators and directors who are desperatel­y trying to keep these services afloat are of the opinion that this is all barmy. The bureaucrat­s are so wedded to their complex funding models that they can’t think outside those models.

There was $8bn allocated to childcare in the last budget. All it would take to keep the sector running is to pay some of this money directly to each service, and bingo – we could continue to provide childcare to every child and family that needs it.

But unless this happen this week, services will close, and their educators will scatter.

When our nurses and doctors can’t turn up to their jobs because they have no one to look after their children there will be an uproar.

By then it will be too late to re-open them.

• Lisa Bryant is an advocate for education and care in Australia and a consultant to education and care services

 ?? Photograph: Noel McLaughlin/The Guardian ?? ‘Once families pull out, the government subsidies that fund wages and rent for childcare centres go, which forces our education and care centres to close their doors eventually.’
Photograph: Noel McLaughlin/The Guardian ‘Once families pull out, the government subsidies that fund wages and rent for childcare centres go, which forces our education and care centres to close their doors eventually.’

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