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BusinessAnalysis

Throne speech breathes new life into an old, empty promise: a national child-care program

A number of Canadian governments have claimed to want to tackle the equity issue of affordable child care head-on, and in Wednesday's speech from the throne, the governing Liberals seemingly added their name to the list.

Government outlines plans to implement daycare program with precious few details

Numerous governments in Canada have promised some form of subsidized, universal child-care program over the years, but so far none have actually come to pass. (Ian Barrett/The Canadian Press)

It has been 50 years since the Royal Commission on the Status of Women made it clear that access to affordable child care is one of the biggest hurdles standing in the way of women's economic equality, and numerous governments of the five decades since then have claimed to want to tackle the problem head-on.

The Liberals promised it in their famous Red Book in 1993, and 11 years later Paul Martin promised iton the campaign trail, only to have his government fallbefore it could be implemented, and Michael Ignatieff resurrected the idea in 2011. Thenthe New Democratsmade$15-a-day daycare a campaign pledge in theirfailed bid for power in 2015.

Wednesday's speech from the throne suggests the current government wants to be the latest to claim to have taken a crack at it.

"The government will make a significant, long-term, sustained investment to create a Canada-wide early-learning and child-care system," Gov. Gen.Julie Payette said in thespeech, without elaborating on just what, exactly, that means.

Throne speeches are always about big-picture thinking, not nitty-gritty details, and Wednesday's child-care news was no exception. Instead of a concrete plan, the government says it wants to "build on previous investments ... and work with all provinces and territories to ensure that high-quality care is accessible to all."

And while experts in the field welcome the issue getting some attention, it's still far from clear what exactly the government is planning to do.

Leah Nord ofthe Canadian Chamber of Commerce, had been urging the government to lay out programs to assist female businesses owners and employees, and child care was at the top of that wish list.

"Child care is the No.1 issue forentrepreneurs," she said in an interview after the speech on Wednesday. "If employees can't get child care, there's no business toopen up andthere is no economic recovery."

A Black adult woman supervises toddlers at a table in a child-care centre.
Although expensive to set up and operate, research suggests that top-quality early childhood education programs pay off down the line by improving incomes and other outcomes. (Jean Laroche/CBC)

While Nordis encouraged to hear the government has a vague plan to address the issue, "the devil is in the details," she said.

If not a government-run system, she said shewould liketo see Ottawa help businesses that are trying to solve child-care problems for their employees, such asabrewery in Thunder Bay that recently launched a daycare centre for its workersso that they could be available to get back to work.

"It's that type of innovative thinking the government can really use," Nordsaid. "Ifwe could have had child care covered in the wage subsidy, that would have been great."

Toronto entrepreneur Reena Parekhis among those who thinks something must be done. As a fitness instructor, she lost most of her businesswhen gyms and fitness centres shut down in the early days of the COVID-19 pandemic.

She pivoted to move as much of her business online as possible, but with two small children to care for and a partner who works outside the home sixdays a week, she saidit's next to impossible to do it all.

"There's been days when Ithought Ishould juststop, why bother right now," she told CBC News.

WATCH | The government's plan for child care is outlined in the throne speech:

The throne speech: the government's plans for childcare

4 years ago
Duration 1:42
Gov. Gen. Julie Payette delivered the 150th speech from the throne in the Senate chamber on Wednesday.

"I want to hear what are we going to do to bring women backinto the workforce," Parekh saidprior to the speech.

"I want to hear more about support for working parents [because] that balance is just not sustainable," she said. "It needs more funding, frankly, and accessible child care."

Janet Davis, a former Toronto city councillor who is now afellow at the Broadbent Institute, a progressive non-partisan organization, has been an advocate for a national child-care program for most of her career, and she saidshe's "hopeful" that this time will, in fact, be different.

While far from perfect, she saidQuebec's system could be a model for the rest of the country. Implemented in 1997, familiesin the province were guaranteed a spot in a child-care centre offeringhigh-quality, subsidized care for as little as $5 a day when it started in 1997, although the costs have risen since then.

Davis saidprevious attempts to start a similar program in other provinces or nationally fell apart because provinces were unwilling to cede control of any new program to the federal government which in turn was unwilling to demand accountability for the money it waswilling to contribute. But she said she hopes that won't happen this time.

"Women need it. The economy needs it, and our federal and provincial governments have to work together to deliver it," she said in an interview on Wednesday.

Financial consultant Laideen Dockery says the cost of child care is not a women's issue, it's a problem for the entire economy. (Desiree Thomas)

LaideenDockery is among those who knows how crucial child care will be to a full economic recovery. The Toronto-area entrepreneur and owner of her own financial consultancy saiditis a problem at the best of times, but even more so during the ongoing pandemic.

Her partner, a front-line worker, worked out of the home throughout the pandemic, which left more of the child-care responsibilities on Dockerywhile she juggled client meetings and tried to keep up business as usual.

"It really affected my ability to work onmy own business," she said,"so I've had a decrease in income."

Working mothers like Dockery and Parekh are hopeful that political talk may finally turn into action.

"This is not just a women's issue, this is an economic issue," Parekh said. "It's time we started looking at real solutions."