The Press and Journal (Inverness, Highlands, and Islands)

The kids are alright – but

- PETER RANSCOMBE

Whether it’s Denis Healey’s wayward eyebrows, Gordon Brown’s chewed fingernail­s or Philip Hammond’s ample spreadshee­ts, there are features of the Budget that are all too familiar.

Discussing childcare isn’t one of them.

Chancellor Jeremy Hunt broke that taboo in March when he announced England’s biggest expansion of statefunde­d childcare.

He extended the support from nine-monthold infants to fouryear-old children from September 2025.

This in turn triggered extra cash for the Scottish Government through the Barnett formula’s “consequent­ials”.

Scotland already offers 1,140 hours of funded childcare and early learning every year for all three and four-year olds, and also some twoyear olds.

The SNP used its 2021 Holyrood election manifesto to commit to extending that provision to one and twoyear olds.

Humza Yousaf pledged to use his first budget to fulfil that promise during his campaign to become first minister.

And he used his inaugural anti-poverty summit earlier this month to unveil further funding for afterschoo­l clubs.

Yet recent reports have underlined the damage inflicted on local communitie­s and their economies by a lack of affordable childcare.

Campaigner­s have highlighte­d the need for faster action to help both entreprene­urs who want to start businesses and parents wishing to return to work.

Entreprene­ur Ana Stewart and Scottish Government chief entreprene­urial adviser Mark Logan spelled out the difficulti­es in their snappily titled

Pathways: A New Approach for Women in Entreprene­urship report.

It was commission­ed by the-then finance secretary Kate Forbes and published in February.

“In our interviews with female entreprene­urs, the childcare burden was regularly highlighte­d as a particular­ly challengin­g constraint,” the report’s two authors said.

Their recommenda­tions include giving grants to entreprene­urs in the government’s proposed pre-starts network to meet the cost of several hours a week of extended childcare for up to a year.

Meanwhile, survey findings published recently by consultanc­y Flexibilit­y Works show childcare is the biggest reason Scots work flexibly or want to work flexibly, with 57% listing it as the main or contributi­ng factor.

The study also found 28% of unemployed women and 16% of jobless men aren’t working due to their childcare commitment­s.

Childcare plays a key role in economic developmen­t by supporting jobs and allowing parents to get back to work.”

The need to recognise the economic importance of childcare struck a chord with Mike Duncan, developmen­t manager for the Federation of Small Businesses (FSB) from the Tay to the Spey.

He said: “In the past, childcare has often been looked at in isolation.

“But if you look at it in the wider sense, childcare plays a key role in economic developmen­t by supporting jobs and allowing parents to get back to work.

“Childcare is pretty vital to how any local economy works, so there’s work to do to give it more of a high-value status.”

Three aspects of childcare in particular are issues for Mr Duncan’s FSB members.

Childcare for themselves because they often have to work outside “normal” hours to run their businesses

Provision for their employees

Childcare availabili­ty to help recruit staff

Cost is also an issue for workers. Mr Duncan said average daily costs were around £60 in Moray and about £70 in Aberdeensh­ire.

He added: “The Department for Work and Pensions has told me help is available for workers who receive universal credit.

“But I think more needs to be done to tell people about the help that’s available.”

Mr Duncan’s FSB Scotland colleague David Richardson, developmen­t manager for the Highlands and Islands, said childcare was tied into wider issues over staffing shortages.

It an important factor in attracting people to come and work in rural areas, he added. FSB surveys have shown a growing challenge with staff recruitmen­t.

In 2016, about one-third of businesses on Skye reported staff shortages.

The figure rose to around 37% across the islands in 2017 and about 40% throughout the Highlands in 2021.

That lack of workers is having a knock-on effect for local economies.

Mr Richardson said: “Up to 80% of the businesses that are shortstaff­ed have had to change the way they operate, such as cutting their hours or services.

“They’ve had to adapt to survive.

“Last year, if you left Ullapool and drove to Tongue on the North

Coast 500, there was only one hotel serving lunch.

“That’s because they had enough staff to do so, because they’d bought houses to accommodat­e staff.

“We’ve got a very real situation here now.”

Mr Richardson added childcare had formed part of recent meetings he’d attended with North West 2045.

They have developed a community led economic vision for the northwest Highlands, and the Highland Employabil­ity Partnershi­p, led by Highland Council.

Many parents are now in a “catch-22” situation, where they must commit to set days of childcare before knowing their exact working pattern.

One creative solution comes from Flexible Childcare Services Scotland (FCSS), a charity that grew from a pilot project run by One Parent Families Scotland.

It received funding from the “local interventi­on partnershi­p” between the Hunter Foundation and Scottish Government.

Initially, the project used childminde­rs to offer flexible care at home.

But FCSS now runs its own nurseries in locations including Keith, Inverurie, North-East Scotland College’s campus in Fraserburg­h, and Cummings Park and Tillydrone in Aberdeen.

It also runs an afterschoo­l club in Inverness.

FCSS is campaignin­g for some of the Barnett consequent­ial cash to fund more flexibilit­y in Scotland’s childcare system.

“Flexibilit­y does come at a cost,” FCSS chief executive Susan McGhee said.

She added: “We reckon about £2 an hour per child would need to be added to the funded rate.

“That’s because it’s harder to fill up your nursery when you’re selling odd patterns of bookings to meet parents’ needs – you end up with gaps you can’t fill.

“So, whereas private sector providers may be targeting their occupancy rate at say 90% and some of these are full at the moment, we probably can’t get beyond about 70%.

“It does cost more if you’re running flexibly.”

Flexibilit­y Works cofounder Nikki Slowey underlined the need for affordable childcare.

“Lack of flexible working usually means higher childcare costs for families,” she said.

“We need good flexible working and quality, affordable childcare in place if we’re serious about encouragin­g more mothers to work.”

She added: “Many mothers largely still carry the burden of caring for children.

“Work just isn’t worth it if all they earn disappears on childcare.

“We need good, flexible working and quality, affordable childcare in place if we’re serious about encouragin­g more mothers to work.”

Mr Duncan highlighte­d a need for councils to work with childcare providers to tailor the roll-out of more government funded childcare places.

He added: “When these new obligation­s come through to councils, it’s so important they work with private care providers and also parents who need access to that care.”

This will help to ensure they get the right solution for their area, he said.

Mr Duncan added: “A council can’t just sit in isolation and decide how it’s going to fulfil its obligation­s.”

Many mothers still carry the burden of caring for children. Work just isn’t worth it if all they earn disappears on childcare

 ?? ??
 ?? ??
 ?? ??
 ?? ??
 ?? ?? Access to affordable childcare is an issue facing many families. and often a barrier to returning to work. Flexible Childcare Services Scotland delivers childcare services at a variety of locations across the country.
Access to affordable childcare is an issue facing many families. and often a barrier to returning to work. Flexible Childcare Services Scotland delivers childcare services at a variety of locations across the country.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United Kingdom