Toronto Star

Provincial daycare focus is welcomed by parents

Critics, however, say Ontario is promising to boost access without a restructur­ing plan

- LAURIE MONSEBRAAT­EN SOCIAL JUSTICE REPORTER

Parents are applauding the Wynne government’s plans to double access to child care for infants, toddlers and preschoole­rs over the next five years by adding 100,000 more licensed spots in schools, workplaces and community settings across Ontario.

The investment, listed as a top priority in the Liberals’ throne speech Monday, would mean about 40 per cent of children from birth to age 4 would have access to licensed care, up from just 20 per cent today. (The education ministry estimates between 45 and 50 per cent of families with young children are looking for licensed daycare.)

But child-care watchers are worried the promise, with a price tag of between $1 billion and $3 billion in new capital spending and $600 million to $750 million in annual operating costs by 2021, is occurring without an overall plan to restructur­e the current patchwork system.

“It’s a big commitment. And to get us close to 40-per-cent coverage is huge,” said Carolyn Ferns of the Ontario Coalition for Better Child Care.

“But it’s not just about the number of spaces and the dollars you throw at it. There are structural issues they need to deal with, such as affordabil­ity,” she said. Chronicall­y low wages and uneven program quality are also problems plaguing the system.

Toronto parent Nadine Blum is also concerned about the high cost of care.

Increasing the supply “is certainly a positive step,” said Blum, whose petition last spring to end daycare wait list fees of between $20 and $200 led the province to ban the practice starting this month.

“But I did not hear any specific commitment­s to address the issue of daycare fees,” she said. More than 13,000 Toronto children are waiting for child-care subsidies at a time when parents can pay upwards of $20,000 a year for infant care.

Government officials say recently appointed associate education minister Indira Naidoo-Harris is leading a broader provincial child-care plan. Monday’s announceme­nt “will help build on ongoing work with the federal government, parents and partners to develop a child-care and early-years system focused on quality, affordabil­ity, accessibil­ity, parent choice and flexibilit­y,” according to a ministry background­er.

National child-care expert Martha Friendly praised the province’s financial commitment, noting that any money from Ottawa’s promised child care framework agreement would sweeten the pot.

“I think there is a recognitio­n that child care is complicate­d,” said Friendly, who heads the Torontobas­ed Childcare Resource and Resource Unit. “There are lots of pieces. And you have to work on all the piec- es at the same time. This announceme­nt indicated a willingnes­s to do that and start moving it forward.”

Toronto Councillor Janet Davis, who has pushed the province to do more for city families struggling to find affordable child care, was also cautiously optimistic.

“The investment is significan­t, but we need to wait for the details,” said Davis, who represents Ward 31, Beaches-East York.

“How will it be phased in over five years? Will there be more fee subsidies to help families afford child care? And will the funds be dedicated to expand non-profit, high-quality, licensed child care options?” she said.

 ?? BERNARD WEIL/TORONTO STAR FILE PHOTO ?? Nadine Blum leaves her 2-year-old son at a Toronto daycare.
BERNARD WEIL/TORONTO STAR FILE PHOTO Nadine Blum leaves her 2-year-old son at a Toronto daycare.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Canada