The Telegram (St. John's)

Trudeau blames conservati­ve premiers for problems with national child-care program

The federal budget is set for April 16, but Trudeau is expected to announce small measures from the document in the coming weeks.

- RYAN TUMILTY POSTMEDIA NEWS

OTTAWA — Prime Minister Justin Trudeau blamed conservati­ve premiers for any shortfalls in his child-care program, accusing the provincial government­s of not moving fast enough to build spaces.

Trudeau was in Vancouver on Thursday, announcing another item from the upcoming budget. He announced $1 billion in low-cost loans to allow child-care centres to expand as well as $60 million in grants. He also offered up a rebate program on educationa­l tuitions for child-care providers who work in rural and remote communitie­s.

Trudeau said several provinces, including B.C. are doing well with the national child-care program, but he said others were “slow walking” expansions of the program.

“There are provincial government­s unfortunat­ely that follow the federal Conservati­ves lead on this and are looking to not deliver child care or even cut child-care services,” he said. “We are there to continue to push on the provinces to deliver that to ensure the child-care providers are able to pass along those savings.”

The Trudeau Liberals launched the child-care program in 2021 with $27 billion aimed at getting provinces to offer child care for an average fee of $10 a day. Since the program was launched, eight out of 10 provinces have reached the $10-a-day average, but there are growing waitlists, and many parents face a lack of spaces, while some providers have said they can not afford to operate with the funding they provided.

After passing the legislatio­n in Parliament, the Liberals negotiated individual deals with provinces across the country, B.C. was the first, with requiremen­ts that the provinces lower fees and build new spaces in return for the federal cash.

Earlier this week, the prime minister unveiled the first set of budget measures aimed at renters, while also saying the budget would target younger, millennial and Gen Z, voters.

On Thursday he continued that theme, arguing the childcare plan was about providing a leg-up to young families struggling with other affordabil­ity issues.

“I want to take a moment to talk to young moms, many of you millennial­s, you’ve grown up with so many pressures in this economy, the 2008 recession, COVID, climate change,” he said. “You’re a huge part of the economy, and we want to make sure that everyone, especially moms raising kids, have the best chance to succeed and thrive.”

When it was first introduced, Conservati­ve MPS criticized the child-care program, as a top-down approach that leaves out many parents and interferes in provincial jurisdicti­on.

But they also voted for C-35, legislatio­n the government introduced last year, which officially enshrines the program making it harder, though not impossible to eliminate the program in future.

Trudeau said the program is an improvemen­t not just for parents, but for the broader economy.

“It’s giving every kid the best start in life because we know that access to high quality child care can help them do better in school, and it’s a building block to success in life,” he said. “It’s estimated that for every dollar invested in child care, the economy gets $2.80 in return.”

The federal budget is set for April 16, but Trudeau is expected to announce small measures from the document in the coming weeks.

 ?? REUTERS ?? Prime Minister Justin Trudeau holds a press conference with Poland’s Prime Minister Donald Tusk at the Chanceller­y of the Prime Minister in Warsaw, Poland, Feb. 26.
REUTERS Prime Minister Justin Trudeau holds a press conference with Poland’s Prime Minister Donald Tusk at the Chanceller­y of the Prime Minister in Warsaw, Poland, Feb. 26.

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