Waterloo Region Record

Child care costs face uphill slog

Report says expenses are growing faster than inflation, causing worries Liberal funds will fall short

- Jordan Press

OTTAWA — A new report shows child care costs are rising faster than inflation, straining pocketbook­s and raising questions about whether billions in new federal spending will make daycare more affordable for those who want it.

Toronto remains the most expensive city for child care, where median daycare costs families about $21,096 a year. The cheapest spaces are in Quebec, where provincial­ly regulated and subsidized daycare has a median cost of $183 a month, or $2,196 a year.

The annual report on child care fees being released today from the Canadian Centre for Policy Alternativ­es also finds for the first time that child care costs in some rural parts of the country are not all that different from the high prices facing parents in many large cities.

“You can categorize your issues in child care — there are not enough spaces, the quality is very variable — but affordabil­ity is a pervasive issue across the country,” said Martha Friendly, co-author of the study and executive director of the Toronto-based Childcare Resource and Research Unit. “It’s not getting better and we still have yet to see if any of the (federal) interventi­ons are going to be enough to really address the issue.”

Federal coffers will dole out $7.5 billion over 11 years, beginning with $500 million this year and increasing to $870 million annually by 2026 in order to fund services in provinces and territorie­s. The money could potentiall­y create 40,000 subsidized spaces by early 2020 at a cost of $1.3 billion. The government knows not all the money will be spent on subsidizin­g spaces, but could be used for profession­al developmen­t for child care workers.

The government is also working on a separate child care plan with Indigenous groups that would reflect the needs of First Nations, Inuit and Métis. In some First Nations reserves in Ontario, the report found, parents didn’t pay anything for child care, suggesting that direct operationa­l funding from the government makes fees much more affordable.

David Macdonald, a senior economist at the policy centre who co-authored the study with Friendly, said it isn’t clear to him that the new federal spending will make a big dent in daycare costs. Making child care more affordable requires government­s to set fees and provide operating grants to defray costs, he said.

The House of Commons finance committee hinted at the same issue in its budget wish list released last week. Among the recommenda­tions for spending items in the 2018 budget was a request to provide the money needed to create an early learning and child care system. None of the money can flow without funding agreements with provinces. So far, three provinces and one territory have threeyear spending deals in place.

A spokesman for Social Developmen­t Minister Jean-Yves Duclos said the Liberals may allow some provinces to carry over spending beyond 2020, but restrictio­ns are tight to prod provinces into delivering services as soon as possible.

“We have an expectatio­n that provinces and territorie­s will deliver on the commitment­s they made,” said spokesman Mathieu Filion. “Delivering on the plans is how we’ll make child care better in Canada.”

 ?? JEFF MCINTOSH, THE CANADIAN PRESS ?? Jean-Yves Duclos, Minister of Families, Children and Social Developmen­t, at a Liberal cabinet retreat in Calgary Tuesday. A new report shows child care costs are rising faster than inflation, straining pocket books and raising questions about Ottawa’s...
JEFF MCINTOSH, THE CANADIAN PRESS Jean-Yves Duclos, Minister of Families, Children and Social Developmen­t, at a Liberal cabinet retreat in Calgary Tuesday. A new report shows child care costs are rising faster than inflation, straining pocket books and raising questions about Ottawa’s...

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