Close X
Thursday, September 19, 2024
ADVT 
National

Child Care Advocates Fear Consequences If Liberal Funding Promise Falls Through

The Canadian Press, 10 Apr, 2016 01:04 PM
    OTTAWA — A federal promise to spend hundreds of millions of dollars on a national child care system is not a sure thing — and advocates are wondering happens to the money if the Liberals can't reach agreements on a long-sought day care framework.
     
    The government promised to spend $500 million next year on child care, tying it to ongoing talks with the provinces about a national child care framework that would establish the ground rules for federal involvement in an area of provincial jurisdiction, not unlike health care.
     
    Included in that promise is $100 million for First Nations child care on reserves, an area for which the federal government has direct responsibility.
     
    Federal officials say the money is intended as an incentive to the provinces to entice them into signing onto a child-care framework and to demonstrate that the federal government wants to be a willing partner in the child care system.
     
    But what if there is no agreement by next year — or only a handful of provinces sign on to a framework?
     
    Employment and Social Development Canada, the federal department overseeing the initiative, would only say that the details of the "disbursement of unused funds are still being determined."
     
    Don Giesbrecht, executive director of the Canadian Child Care Federation, said his group plans to hold the federal government to its promise for spending.
     
    He sees no reason why the provincial, territorial and federal governments wouldn't be able to reach an agreement on child care.
     
    The funding proposal matches what child care advocates quietly asked for behind the scenes in the months before the budget. But that's what they were hoping for in this fiscal year — not next — to help lower day care fees, among other issues.
     
    "We sort of thought, to use a phrase, there was some low-hanging fruit there that perhaps could have been addressed immediately, but it wasn't," Giesbrecht said.
     
    "That's OK. We'll build and work towards something that is really robust and progressive in terms of policy."
     
    Social Development Minister Jean-Yves Duclos said in February that he thought the provinces, territories and federal government were on a fast track to a child care framework, building on the work done a decade earlier when the Paul Martin government signed child care agreements with the provinces.
     
    Duclos cautioned at the time that each province had unique needs and programs in place that meant the framework couldn't take a one-size-fits-all approach.
     
    Carolyn Ferns of the Ontario Coalition for Better Child Care said the families in those provinces have much in common. She said there are issues of affordability, accessibility and the quality of child care in every province.
     
    "The provinces are all a lot more the same than they are different," she said. 
     
    "This flexibility talk — while it is important to be flexible, it's also important to have a strong, principle-based framework that builds a program that will last."

    MORE National ARTICLES

    Burrowing Owls To Be Released For First Time On B.C. First Nations Reserve

    Burrowing Owls To Be Released For First Time On B.C. First Nations Reserve
     MERRITT, B.C. — Burrowing owls will be released on First Nations land for the first time in British Columbia with the goal of reintroducing the endangered birds on a reserve near Merritt, B.C.

    Burrowing Owls To Be Released For First Time On B.C. First Nations Reserve

    Winnipeg Health Authority Apologizes To Mohinder Singh's Family For Delay In Review Of Painful Death

    Winnipeg Health Authority Apologizes To Mohinder Singh's Family For Delay In Review Of Painful Death
    Last fall, Mohinder Singh, 57, went to Seven Oaks General Hospital with a severe headache but was told she would have to wait for a CT scan, so she eventually laid down on the floor because it was too painful to sit in a wheelchair.

    Winnipeg Health Authority Apologizes To Mohinder Singh's Family For Delay In Review Of Painful Death

    Mission, B.C. Man Pleads Guilty To Woman's Death In Fire And Attempted Murder Of 2 Kids

    Mission, B.C. Man Pleads Guilty To Woman's Death In Fire And Attempted Murder Of 2 Kids
    A 43-year-old man from Mission, B.C., has pleaded guilty to second-degree murder and two counts of attempted murder.

    Mission, B.C. Man Pleads Guilty To Woman's Death In Fire And Attempted Murder Of 2 Kids

    Vancouver Opera's Latest, Evita, Comes with an Exciting Starcast

    Vancouver Opera's Latest, Evita, Comes with an Exciting Starcast

    Vancouver Opera's company premiere of Tim Rice and Andrew Lloyd Webber's smash hit Evita ...

    Vancouver Opera's Latest, Evita, Comes with an Exciting Starcast

    Procession Honours Fallen RCMP Officer As Body Is Returned To Langford, B.c

    Procession Honours Fallen RCMP Officer As Body Is Returned To Langford, B.c
    The Capital Regional District Traffic Safety Commission says a plane carrying Beckett's body is due to land at the Victoria airport at about 2:30 p.m.

    Procession Honours Fallen RCMP Officer As Body Is Returned To Langford, B.c

    N.S. Politician Steve Sampson Says He’s Being Blackmailed Over Male Escort Call

    N.S. Politician Steve Sampson Says He’s Being Blackmailed Over Male Escort Call
    Steve Sampson, a member of Richmond County council, said he received an unmarked envelope in the mail Tuesday at his home containing a photocopy of a hotel bill from February, 2014, incurred while on county business in Seattle, Wash.

    N.S. Politician Steve Sampson Says He’s Being Blackmailed Over Male Escort Call