Close X
Saturday, September 28, 2024
ADVT 
National

NDP Proposes $15-a-day Child Care, With Million New Spaces, Long-term Financing

The Canadian Press , 14 Oct, 2014 02:33 PM
  • NDP Proposes $15-a-day Child Care, With Million New Spaces, Long-term Financing
OTTAWA - An NDP government would spend $5 billion a year to create a million daycare spaces that parents could access for no more than $15 a day, Tom Mulcair promised Tuesday.
 
A full year ahead of the next scheduled federal election, the NDP leader unveiled a cornerstone of his party's platform: creation of a national, affordable, child-care program, to be phased in over eight years.
 
The announcement had all the trappings of a campaign event, with Mulcair delivering the news in the playground of a community daycare as children cavorted behind him, in full view of television cameras.
 
"For us it's a priority to create these affordable child-care spaces across the country," Mulcair said.
 
"It's $2,000 a month in many of these daycares in Ontario ... So I think that it's quite obvious that people are paying another mortgage by putting their kids (in daycare)."
 
Mulcair said a national child care program would "more than pay for itself," allowing more women to enter the workforce, boosting economic growth and tax revenue and reducing the number of single mothers on social assistance — all while ensuring kids get off to a good start in life.
 
"So it's something that we can't afford not to do."
 
In the first term of an NDP government, Mulcair is promising to negotiate deals with the provinces in which the federal government would pay 60 per cent of the cost, with provincial governments picking up the rest.
 
The goal would be to provide daycare at no more than $15 a day, although Mulcair did not say that would be a hard and fast cap. He stressed that the program would be flexible to accommodate different needs in different provinces.
 
Over the first four years, the annual federal contribution would ramp up from $290 million to $1.9 billion, creating or helping maintain almost 800,000 child care spaces.
 
Over the second four years, the annual federal contribution would grow to $5 billion. Once fully phased in, Mulcair said the program would support or maintain creation of one million daycare spaces.
 
The program is based on the success of Quebec's $7-a-day child-care program, which Mulcair, a former Quebec cabinet minister, said he's proud to export to the rest of the country.
 
However, Quebec is struggling with the $2 billion cost of its program. It has recently indexed the daily fee to the annual inflation rate and is reportedly considering introduction of a sliding fee scale based on parents' income.
 
Mulcair said it would be up to provinces to decide details, such as whether to have a sliding fee scale or whether to fund for-profit daycares, although the NDP preference would be to fund non-profit centres.
 
It's conceivable that some provinces might prefer to spend their money on other priorities, like health care. But Mulcair said he hopes that by the end of a first mandate, he'd have "the vast majority of provinces signed onto a program that's so attractive to them they wouldn't want to leave the money on the table."
 
Mulcair is using the child care issue to underscore what he sees as a big difference between the NDP and the Conservatives and Liberals, whom he accuses of talking about daycare for 30 years but never delivering.
 
In fact, Paul Martin's Liberal government negotiated deals with all the provinces in 2005 for a national child-care program, worth $5 billion over five years. However, it never got off the ground because Martin's minority government fell when opposition parties, including the NDP, voted non-confidence.
 
Prime Minister Stephen Harper's Conservatives won the subsequent election and scrapped the child-care program, replacing it with a $100-a-month universal child-care benefit for parents of children under the age of six.
 
Mulcair said an NDP government would continue to pay the child-care benefit, as well as invest billions in a national daycare program.

MORE National ARTICLES

Alberta: New city app helps Edmontonians sort out wildflowers from weeds

Alberta: New city app helps Edmontonians sort out wildflowers from weeds
The City of Edmonton has introduced an app called Alberta Weed Spotter which lists all 75 invasive species that are regulated under Alberta’s Weed Control Act.

Alberta: New city app helps Edmontonians sort out wildflowers from weeds

Christian Paradis says Canada bears no blame in mass jailbreak from Haitian prison

Christian Paradis says Canada bears no blame in mass jailbreak from Haitian prison
MONTREAL - International Development Minister Christian Paradis is rejecting any finger-pointing at Ottawa over a mass breakout at a Haitian maximum-security prison that was built by Canada.

Christian Paradis says Canada bears no blame in mass jailbreak from Haitian prison

B.C.: Leaders of polygamous sect charged five years after failed prosecutions

B.C.: Leaders of polygamous sect charged five years after failed prosecutions
CRANBROOK, B.C. - Two leaders of an isolated religious commune in British Columbia have been charged for the second time with practising polygamy, more than two decades after allegations of multiple marriage, sexual abuse and cross-border child trafficking first attracted the attention of the outside world.

B.C.: Leaders of polygamous sect charged five years after failed prosecutions

Experts, not politicians, to decide who gets donated Ebola vaccine: Canada

Experts, not politicians, to decide who gets donated Ebola vaccine: Canada
TORONTO - Canadian Heritage Minister Shelly Glover says politics has no place in the decisions on how best to use the 800 to 1,000 doses Canada has promised to donate.

Experts, not politicians, to decide who gets donated Ebola vaccine: Canada

Tekmira in talks about using experimental Ebola drug in infected patients

Tekmira in talks about using experimental Ebola drug in infected patients
VANCOUVER - Tekmira Pharmaceuticals Corp. (TSX:TKM) is in discussions about making its experimental Ebola drug available to infected patients, but says there is no guarantee the treatment can be used to help quell the outbreak in West Africa.

Tekmira in talks about using experimental Ebola drug in infected patients

Vancouver police officer used too much force during traffic stop: watchdog

Vancouver police officer used too much force during traffic stop: watchdog
A Vancouver police officer used excessive and unnecessary force when he punched a driver three times during a traffic stop in 2012, said a ruling by B.C.'s police watchdog.

Vancouver police officer used too much force during traffic stop: watchdog