B.C. United proposes top-up payments for child-care costs - Action News
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British Columbia

B.C. United proposes top-up payments for child-care costs

British Columbia's Opposition partyis pitchinga child-care plan that includes giving money directly to families who are not part of the province's $10-a-day program.

Better wages for educators, more spaces in public facilities also proposed; advocates voice concern over plan

A man in a navy blue suit with rectangular glasses speaks into microphones while a woman wearing a black sweater and white blouse stands beside him.
B.C. United Leader Kevin Falcon and party candidate for Esquimalt-Colwood Meagan Brame announced the child-care plan at the daycare Brame owns in Esquimalt, B.C., on Thursday. (Mike McArthur/CBC)

British Columbia's Opposition partyis pitchinga child-care plan that includes giving money directly to families who are not part of the province's $10-a-day program.

B.C. United has also proposed better wages for early childhood educators and opening more child-care spaces in public facilities, includingschools and hospitals.

"I want all the parents out there struggling with unaffordable daycare to understand this: we are going to fix this problem immediately," Leader Kevin Falcon said in a news conference Thursday.

But child-care advocates voiced concernabout the idea of giving funds directly to parents, saying it won't create more spaces for children and could create accountability issues.

a wall features little month images made to look like a children's train. a stuffed giraffe and a bookshelf.
There are over 15,000 $10-a-day spaces in B.C., according to the provincial government. (Darryl Dyck/The Canadian Press)

Money not equal to spaces: advocate

B.C. began testing $10-a-day child care with 1,300 spaces in 2018 as part of an election promise by the NDP. That number has grown to more than 15,000 as of March.

Under Falcon's proposed plan, families who don't have access to those spaces would get a top-up to give them the equivalent of paying $10 per day.

By way of example, the party said a family that pays $1,155 a month for child care would receive $955 a monthuntil they could access an $10-a-day space.

But Sharon Gregson, provincial spokesperson for the $10-a-day child-care campaign who works with theCoalition of Child Care Advocates of B.C., says the plan is flawed.

"Making cash transfers to families doesn't magically mean there's going to be more child care out there for them to buy," she told CBC News.

"It is just a way to keep government costs getting higher without very much accountability back to taxpayers."

Minister of State for Child Care Mitzi Deansaidthe plan is "just not credible" andfees would go up underB.C. United.

"Their record is actually cutting subsidies for child care," Dean told Radio Canada."And as a result, we ended up with really skyrocketing costs for child care for families across British Columbia,and families can't afford to go back to that kind of a model."

Calls for more solutions

Emily Gawlick, executive director of Early Childhood Educators of B.C., questions whether there will be a capon the money given to parents, and says the money would be better spent on existing daycare subsidies.

WATCH | Parents waiting for child care say they are unable to work:

B.C. woman has been waiting years for child care for her son

7 months ago
Duration 3:45
Parents who are waiting months to years for child care say they are unable to work and are getting frustrated by the uncertainty. Despite significant investments to lower child care fees, advocates say there are still not enough spaces.

"Giving funds directly to families, just for them to pass it on to their provider, doesn't put the onus on those programs to deliver those high quality services. And that's what we really need to focus on," Gawlick said in an interview.

Gregson wants a mandate and funding to all school districts so that elementary schools can start providing before and after school care, and care during the summer as well. She's also calling for more child-care spaces to be built into new housing.

"We've made big progress since 2018 but [we're] not moving quickly enough at this point," she said.

With files from Amlia MachHour