Close X
Sunday, November 24, 2024
ADVT 
National

Liberals Told To Rethink Child Care Policy To Claim To Be 'Feminist Government'

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 09 Jan, 2019 01:42 AM

    OTTAWA — A Trudeau "feminist government" should be doing more to create a universal daycare system, and prevent the funding from being lost in electoral politics, says a leading expert.


    The federal treasury is set to spend $7.5 billion over a decade to help fund child-care spaces across the country.


    Social Development Minister Jean-Yves Duclos is to be in Hamilton on Wednesday to talk about the Liberals' child care commitment, which over the first three years will cost $1.3 billion and potentially create or maintain 40,000 subsidized spaces nationally.


    A self-declared "feminist government" should consider quickly doing more toward a universal system that could boost women's participation in the labour force, Brock University's Kate Bezanson argues in a paper published in the most recent issue of the Journal of Law and Equity.


    Bezanson, an expert on feminist policy and chair of Brock's sociology department, said in an interview there is a disconnect between the policies the Liberals have enacted, particularly on child care spending and new parental leave policies, and the apsirational talk about the gender equality.


    In some cases, government policy seems at times to replicate those of the previous Conservative government, which the Liberals frequently criticize.


    "That disconnect ... is notable for a government that is taking a lot of really important feminist steps," Bezanson said.


    Child care and parental leave may be expensive, she said, but they "also the yield the biggest results and those have been more lightly pressed than we would have imagined from a government that understands itself as a feminist government."


    Her paper also touches on concerns that long-term child care funding could be undone after this fall's election if the Liberals don't enshrine the spending into law — which the Liberals plan to do with affordable housing money — so whichever party is elected can't cancel it.


    Promises of transfers to the provinces are only good for three years, after which new funding deals must be signed.


    This election year has already started out with questions about the long-term outlook of federal finances, which the Finance Department projects will remain in deficit for about 21 years, not including any new spending. That makes it difficult to commit to any major increases in spending, Bezanson said, noting that child care is often where funding is neglected.


    Child care groups interested in seeing the Liberals boost their spending commitments have come away from talks with the view that the government won't unveil any new measures in the 2019 budget.


    Internal government documents provide a window into the Liberals' efforts to walk their feminist talk, with universal child care system noted as a best practice internationally and domestically for a feminist government.


    The presentations from the fall of 2017, crafted a group of civil servants overseeing work on feminist policies, singled out countries such as Sweden and Norway, as well as Quebec's daycare system, as key contributors to increasing the number of women in the workforce and broader gender equality. The documents were obtained by The Canadian Press under the federal access-to-information law.


    In Quebec, the labour force participation of parents with young children has increased faster than in the rest of the country since the introduction of its subsidized system in 1997. Had women and men participated equally in the labour force nationally in 2016, shortly after the Liberals took office, the government estimated that 880,000 more women would have been working that year.

    MORE National ARTICLES

    Surrey RCMP Seek Witnesses To Car Accident That Seriously Injured Pedestrian

    On December 29th at approximately 7:20 am Surrey RCMP responded to a collision involving a pedestrian and an Acura CSX sedan at the intersection of 152 Street and 68 Avenue.

    Surrey RCMP Seek Witnesses To Car Accident That Seriously Injured Pedestrian

    Vancouver Coastal Health Denies Allegations Made After Toddler's Death At Daycare

    The health authority filed its response to the statement of claim in B.C. Supreme Court in early December.

    Vancouver Coastal Health Denies Allegations Made After Toddler's Death At Daycare

    Crown Tells Jury That Undercover Confession Of Girl's Murder Should Be Accepted

    Crown Tells Jury That Undercover Confession Of Girl's Murder Should Be Accepted
    He said Handlen had no need to continue working for a supposed crime group set up in a RCMP sting operation because he had lots of work as a handyman.    

    Crown Tells Jury That Undercover Confession Of Girl's Murder Should Be Accepted

    Abbotsford Family Recovering After Suffering Carbon Monoxide Poisoning In Car

    Abbotsford Family Recovering After Suffering Carbon Monoxide Poisoning In Car
    The woman's three-year-old child remains in hospital in stable condition and is expected to be released early next week.

    Abbotsford Family Recovering After Suffering Carbon Monoxide Poisoning In Car

    RCMP Say Three Questioned After Latest Targeted Shooting In Surrey, B.C.

    Officers in Surrey, B.C., are investigating what appears to be the latest, targeted drive-by shooting.

    RCMP Say Three Questioned After Latest Targeted Shooting In Surrey, B.C.

    No Arrests As Vancouver Detectives Investigate City's First Homicide Of 2019

    Const. Jason Doucette says in a news release that police were called to an apartment in Vancouver's Downtown Eastside around 8 p.m. on Jan. 1.

    No Arrests As Vancouver Detectives Investigate City's First Homicide Of 2019