The Press

Pledgeof $193m ECE funding lift

- VERNON SMALL

Labour is promising an extra $193 million over three years for early childhood education.

Leader Andrew Little said Labour would increase funding ‘‘for centres that employ 100 per cent qualified and registered teachers, and we will require all ECE centres to employ at least 80 per cent qualified teachers by the end of our first term’’.

‘‘This $193m increase ... demonstrat­es our commitment to strong public services as the foundation for a just and prosperous society.’’

The announceme­nt by Little yesterday fleshes out the party’s long-standing policy for the sector.

He said scrapping National’s tax cuts - a key feature of Labour’s family package - meant it could afford to invest in the things that will make a difference to people’s lives.

‘‘National has reduced funding for ECE centres that have 100 per cent qualified teachers and has frozen per-child funding rates since 2010. As a result, ECE fees have risen 25 per cent for parents.’’

Labour would end the freeze and increase funding to at least account for inflation.

He said Labour would roll out its plans for a ‘‘fresh approach’’ to the education sector over the next week.

In March, Labour’s education spokesman Chris Hipkins signed up to education trade union NZEI’s ‘‘Have a Heart Pledge’’ to ‘‘properly funding early childhood education, dealing with ballooning class/group sizes, and returning to the goal of 100 per cent qualified teachers in centres’’.

Yesterday, he said Labour would provide targeted grants for new public ECEs in areas of lowprovisi­on and only provide taxpayer subsidies for new ECEs ‘‘if there’s an establishe­d need’’.

The NZEI welcomed Labour’s ECE policy as a ‘‘wonderful first step’’, saying it would provide tangible benefits for children.

‘‘Labour’s promise to restore funding for services that employ 100 per cent qualified teachers, will be an enormous relief for teachers and services who’ve struggled to maintain quality after the current Government cut their funding in 2010,’’ NZEI Te Riu Roa president Lynda Stuart said.

‘‘At the moment many children are getting a high-quality ECE from qualified profession­al teachers, but some children aren’t. We say every child is worth the best.’’

But Finance Minister Steven Joyce said Labour was selling the ECE sector short and funding for early childhood education had more than doubled under this government.

‘‘We’ve just added $390m in new funding for early childhood education over the next four years, starting just two weeks ago on July 1.

‘‘That forms part of our huge $7 billion investment in growing core public services in Budget 2017.’’

Labour is set to next week outline its plans for extra spending, including how it will allocate the $600m a year freed up by scrapping National’s tax-cut package in favour of its own, cheaper plan targeted at families and low and middle-income earners.

It will have extra cash to spend on top of the $600m because it plans to lower Government debt more slowly than National.

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