Medicine Hat News

Employers happy to avoid childcare costs

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initiative that provided employers a 25 per cent tax credit to a maximum of $10,000 per space on costs incurred to build or expand licensed childcare facilities.

The goal of the program implemente­d in 2006 was to create 5,000 new workplace daycare spaces annually, but fewer than 100 individual­s and 20 corporatio­ns were claiming the credit each year, according to Finance Canada.

Employers’ lack of interest in childcare in Canada is disappoint­ing, said Tanya van Biesen, executive director for Catalyst Canada, whose mission is advancing women’s progress in the workplace.

Many parents have no choice but stay home to watch their children because they would be “breaking even or falling behind” financiall­y if they had to pay full fare for daycare, she said.

“For many years, people didn’t really think about or care about the fact that women were exiting stage right because they didn’t have any other options,” she said.

Employers recognize childcare is a major factor in attracting and retaining female employees, but balancing the costs and matching needs with resources is difficult, said Peter Dugandzic, CEO of Chartered Profession­als in Human Resources of Alberta.

“I think that’s the issue for most companies. One, there’s the cost, and secondly, the physical layout,” he said.

While some employers advertise daycare access to attract staff, most — if not all — refer to thirdparty services. Some subsidize certain costs or provide the space to daycare operators for free in return for preferred access.

For example, when Mediacorp named BASF Canada as one of its Top Family-Friendly Employers for 2018, it cited the chemical company’s programs including salary top-ups and extended leave for new mothers and fathers — and mentioned the private onsite daycare at its Mississaug­a, Ont., head office.

But the company has no formal relationsh­ip and doesn’t financiall­y support the daycare on the ground floor, said Terri Howard, director of human resources.

Among the few employers that do provide childcare services, many of them are public institutio­ns, such as universiti­es and even Parliament Hill.

At Simon Fraser University’s Burnaby, B.C., campus, a daycare centre that has operated for at least 50 years is run by a nonprofit operator with preference for its 315 spaces given to employees and students.

The university provides space on its grounds rent-free and subsidizes the salaries of two employees, at an annual cost of about $500,000, said Sandi de Domenico, associate vice-president of human resources.

The benefits in recruiting and retention of staff justifies the cost, she said. However, the university’s two other campuses in the area don’t offer childcare and de Domenico couldn’t say why.

Canada could add $150 billion to its economy by 2026 by employing more women in technology and taking steps like providing better access to childcare to boost women’s participat­ion in the workforce, McKinsey Global Institute estimated last year.

In the science, technology, engineerin­g and mathematic­s (STEM) fields — areas that Canada is focused on strengthen­ing due their potential contributi­ons to economic growth — women represent just 20 per cent of jobs in the field.

“Tech doesn’t traditiona­lly support parents,” said Amanda Munday, an advocate for womenident­ified rights who works at technology startup HiMama in Toronto.

“When you think about evening workshops, beer and ping-pong night-time activities, long hours, those things are not conducive to the parent lifestyle.”

Munday estimates it costs $3,400 per month for good-quality daycare for her two kids, a bill she recognizes is unaffordab­le for her startup employer.

Her return to work after having her daughter four years ago, therefore, involved compromise­s.

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