Close X
Friday, September 20, 2024
ADVT 
National

Budget Puts B.C. On Path Towards Universal Child Care Program: Carole James

The Canadian Press, 21 Feb, 2018 12:42 PM
    VICTORIA — Parents with children in licensed day care programs in B.C. will see their costs drop under changes introduced in the provincial budget that the government describes as a first step towards providing a universal child care program.
     
    The province will spend an additional $1 billion on child care over the next three years to lower costs, increase the number of spaces and improve quality.
     
    Finance Minister Carole James said the changes are aimed at parents with infants and toddlers in child care because the government has heard those spaces are the most expensive and difficult to find.
     
    Beginning April 1, funding will be provided to licensed care providers to provide a $350 a month cut in the cost of a child care space.
     
    The government says the fee reductions will help an estimated 50,000 families by 2020-21.
     
    The government is also introducing a new affordable child care benefit starting in September that will provide up to $1,250 a month per child, which it says will benefit an estimated 86,000 families in three years' time.
     
    It will spend money as well to attract, train and retain early childhood educators.
     
    James said Tuesday the government will also work with school district and municipalities to create more spaces, and provide incentives for unlicensed child care providers to become licensed.
     
    "Parents want quality child care that is safe and gives them peace of mind while they are at work," James said in her budget speech.
     
    "Businesses also feel the effects of unaffordable child care. They have told us that economic growth is being hampered. That when a parent can't find child care, it means they lose a worker."
     
     
    Iglika Ivanova, senior economist at the Canadian Centre for Policy Alternatives, said the child care initiative is the first major new social program in B.C. in generations.
     
    "Not only will this help children get off to a good start, more mothers will be able to work and new jobs will be created, which will boost the economy and increase tax revenues almost immediately," she said in a news release.
     
    James described her approach as the first step toward a universal child care program.
     
    "We know our vision for universal child care requires a shift that will take time," she added.
     
    James said the money being spent over the next three years represents the largest amount invested in child care in the province's history.
     
    "I have heard from parents here in Victoria, and across the province, that they are anxious about child care," she said. "Often this anxiety starts before their baby is even born."
     
    James said the government's approach will create more than 22,000 new licensed spaces, and families earning less than $45,000 a year "will pay little to nothing for child care."

    MORE National ARTICLES

    Vancouver Police Say The City's Sixth Homicide Of 2018 Was A Targeted Shooting

    Vancouver Police Say The City's Sixth Homicide Of 2018 Was A Targeted Shooting
    A 32-year-old Surrey man was found critically injured on a street in the city's Kerrisdale neighbourhood.

    Vancouver Police Say The City's Sixth Homicide Of 2018 Was A Targeted Shooting

    Wheels Up For India: Justin Trudeau Takes Wing On Trade Mission To India, Where Sikh Politics Loom

    Wheels Up For India: Justin Trudeau Takes Wing On Trade Mission To India, Where Sikh Politics Loom
    India is the world's second-largest country by population and one of the world's fastest growing economies -- one that's expected to overtake Great Britain later this year to become the fifth largest in the world.

    Wheels Up For India: Justin Trudeau Takes Wing On Trade Mission To India, Where Sikh Politics Loom

    B.C. Ride-hailing Report Makes 32 Recommendations To Pave Way For Regulations

    B.C. Ride-hailing Report Makes 32 Recommendations To Pave Way For Regulations
    An all-party committee in the British Columbia legislature is unanimous in supporting a provincewide plan for ride-hailing services in the province.  

    B.C. Ride-hailing Report Makes 32 Recommendations To Pave Way For Regulations

    Parole Board Rules Out Overnight Leaves For Balaclava Rapist Larry Takahashi

    Parole Board Rules Out Overnight Leaves For Balaclava Rapist Larry Takahashi
    Larry Takahashi is serving three life sentences for multiple counts of rape, aggravated sexual assault and other attacks on 23 women in the Edmonton area in the 1970s and '80s.

    Parole Board Rules Out Overnight Leaves For Balaclava Rapist Larry Takahashi

    B.C. Man Digs Out Moose Trapped Upside Down In Roadside Snowbank

    A logging truck driver in British Columbia was taken by surprise when he saw four legs sticking out of the snow off the side of a road.

    B.C. Man Digs Out Moose Trapped Upside Down In Roadside Snowbank

    Founding Member Of Nanaimo Search And Rescue Killed In Snowmobile Accident

    WHISTLER, B.C. — A volunteer search and rescue organization on Vancouver Island is mourning the loss of one of its founding members.

    Founding Member Of Nanaimo Search And Rescue Killed In Snowmobile Accident