Cape Breton Post

FINDING PRE-PRIMARY WORKERS A CHALLENGE

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Private and non-profit childcare operators in Nova Scotia say it remains to be seen how their sector will ultimately be affected by the ongoing rollout of universal pre-primary for four-year-olds across the province.

However, representa­tives told the legislatur­e’s human resources committee Tuesday, the big issue remains access to enough trained early childhood educators.

Nova Scotia has 2,700 registered early childhood educators with about 1,700 employed in regulated child care.

“Despite the reported numbers of ECEs available to practice in the province, the regulated early learning and care sector has experience­d and continues to experience significan­t challenges in recruiting and retaining staff, impacting quality across programs,’’ said Pam Streeter, of the Private Licensed Administra­tors Associatio­n, a group of for-profit daycares.

A key Liberal campaign promise during the May 2017 election, pre-primary was launched last September in 54 classes in 45 schools. In March, Education Minister Zach Churchill announced an additional 130 new classes are slated to open in 84 schools next fall.

Critics have questioned how fast the government proceeded with its plan, contending the sector will be hurt by the loss of children and qualified staff.

Lisa Davies, of the Non-Profit Directors Associatio­n, said the quick rollout has had negative effects, although there hasn’t yet been the overwhelmi­ng loss of staff predicted.

“Action creates change, speedy change often creates fear,’’ Davies told the committee.

“I believe the speed with which this happened probably is the underlying fear for a lot of the issues that have been raised around the pre-primary program and its impacts on the child-care sector.’’

Education Department officials said 110 early childhood educators were hired to meet initial requiremen­ts, and an additional 700 will be needed by the time pre-primary is fully implemente­d in 2020.

“All of these new classrooms require ECEs. That is pulling those folks away from us — again not a new problem, but adding on to it,’’ Davies later told reporters.

Streeter pointed out that preprimary has only been introduced in under-serviced and rural areas, and the real test will come when it’s fully implemente­d in larger urban centres.

“There aren’t regulated care centres necessaril­y there (in rural areas) to impact,’’ she said. “So it will be in this next year and the year after that we will see the real impact on regulated care.’’

Vicki Elliott-Lopez, executive director of Regulated Child Care and Licensing for the province, told the committee that universal pre-primary is providing more options for child-care profession­als and will act as a recruiting tool that will benefit the entire sector.

Elliott-Lopez said the effects are already being felt, with enrolment for training programs “maxed out’’ at the Nova Scotia Community College for the upcoming school year.

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