24 Manitoba child-care facilities get funding boost for Indigenous programming - Action News
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Manitoba

24 Manitoba child-care facilities get funding boost for Indigenous programming

Two dozen child-care facilities, most of them in Winnipeg, have received a combined $300,000 to increase Indigenous-focused cultural programming for children and education initiatives for staff.

Provincial-federal government early-learning and child-care agreement allocates $300K to cultural programming

Two dozen child-care facilities in Manitoba will receive $300,000 in funding from the provincial and federal governments to help boost Indigenous-focused programming. (Andrew Vaughan/Canadian Press)

Two dozen child-care facilities, most of them in Winnipeg, have received a combined $300,000 through a government program to increase Indigenous-focused, culturalprogramming for children and education initiatives for staff.

Twenty-four child-centre applicants received between $5,000 and $25,000 through aprovincial-federal government early-learning and child-care agreement, Manitoba Education and Early Childhood Learning Minister Wayne Ewasko announced Wednesday.

"All children in Manitoba need access to inclusive, culturally appropriate child-care programming," Ewasko said at a news conference outside Day Nursery Centre in Winnipeg. "There has been an overwhelming demand from child-care facilities for funding to integrate Indigenous cultural components right into their programming."

The initiative comesin response to the Truth and Reconciliation Commission callto action No. 12, which asks for the development of culturally appropriate early childhood education programs for indigenous families.

Ewasko said the grants will allow the centres to invest in resources and supplies to help with Indigenous programming and professional development for staff to learn more about Indigenous cultures.

"It provides us with a step in the right direction toward reconciliationand a greater understanding of our Indigenous families, staff members and community," said Fernanda Hodgsons, executive director of Day Nursery Centre. "This grant will allow us to further include and honour our Indigenous communities."

She said the centre received $25,000 for itsfive child-care facilities in Winnipeg.

Hodgsons said the centre plans to put themoney toward training staff and buying books, toys, art and other materials that are culturally appropriate from local, Indigenous producers where possible.

Alan Lagimodiere, Manitoba'sIndigenous reconciliation and northern relations minister, said the funds are a responseto a history of Indigenous culture being suppressedin schools and early-learning environments.

Indigenous Reconciliation Minister Alan Lagimodiere, left, Manitoba Education and Early Childhood Learning Minister Wayne Ewasko, centre, and Fernanda Hodgsons, executive director of Day Nursery Centre attend the funding announcement in Winnipeg. (CTV pool feed)

"It involves bringing the culture back into the community ... and starting the kids off the right way learning their culture, learning the importance of their culture, where they come from," he said.

The centres applied for funding during the 2020-21 grant process. AndEwasko suggested there will be another intake round for more of the grants in the future.

Thefunding is part of the Canada-Manitoba Early Learning and Child Care Agreement 2021-25, which will provide Manitoba with about $20 millionannually over four yearsto improve access to inclusive, early learning, child-care programs.