With school about to start, parents in Winnipeg scramble to find child care as demand spikes - Action News
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Manitoba

With school about to start, parents in Winnipeg scramble to find child care as demand spikes

Child-care facilities in Winnipeg say families are scrambling to find spaces for before- and after-school care. But licensed facilities are full, leaving some parents struggling to adjust their schedules.

Manitoba Child Care Association says more investment needed for school-age spaces

Families struggle to find child care before new school year

1 year ago
Duration 2:16
With a new school year right around the corner, some families are still struggling to find child care. Specifically for older children, who need a place to go before and after class. And with a provincial election looming, parents and child care providers are looking for solutions.

With the start of classes for many students now less than a week away, some Winnipeg parents who don't have before- and after-school child care are scrambling to find spaces for their kids.

That dilemmais all too familiar for mom Lea-Anne Ritchot. A few years back, she was considering reducing her hours at work before she founda last-minute spot at a child-care centre for her now nine-year-old daughter, who was headed into Grade 1 at the time.

"It was very tight and we were very lucky, and we honestly don't have options for daycare," Ritchot said. "There's no such thing as supply and demand. There's just demand."

There are currently 14,000 licensedspaces for children ages seven to 12,but the Manitoba Child Care Association says that's not enough to accommodate families.

A closeup shows a child's hand pointing to a drawing of cartoon animals on a table, while other children are seen in the background working on crafts.
Some Winnipeg child-care operators say families are still struggling to find spaces for before- and after-school care, with the start of classes just days away. (Rob Kruk/CBC)

The demand is growing for spaces at Fort Garry Child Care Centre, where executive director Jennifer Couillard said changes to bell times in the Pembina Trails School Division have prompted more parents to seek out a spot.

"I found our wait lists have probably increased by a good 10 per cent since that announcement," Couillard said.

"We've had quite a few families who previously had child care with us who have called us and asked to come back, because they can't manoeuvre their daily schedule around that schedule anymore."

Start and end times are changing at 17 schools in the division to deal with a growing student population and an increase in the number of students who take the bus.

Students in 12 schools will start their day at 9:20 a.m. and end at 3:55 p.m. Class at the remainder of schools will start at 8:25 a.m. and end at 3:00 p.m.

A woman in floral pattern shirt poses is pictured in front of a greenspace.
Lea-Anne Ritchot said finding before- and after-school care for her daughter was challenging. (Josh Crabb/CBC)

All 110 of the licensed school-aged childspaces run inPembina Trails schools by Couillard's centre are full.

"With school starting as late as 9:20 that can be really difficult for families," Couillard said.

A lack of daycare and before/after-school care availability presents "ongoing challenges to parents and caregivers across Manitoba,"Pembina Trails School Division superintendent Lisa Boles acknowledged.

"This can be an even greater challenge in schools with high student populations with limited space," she saidin a statement emailed to CBC.

The division has been working withproviders to provide additional space for child care wherever possible, Boles said.

"In the last five months of the school year we were able to provide additional space for beforeand after care providers in eight schools in preparation for this fall," she said.

Spike in demand after $10-a-daycare

It's not only an issue in Pembina Trails.

Charanjit Singh, a director with Huron Child Care on McPhillips Street, said there are around 200 people on a wait-list for15 licensed spaces available in its school-ageprogram.

"There is big demand," Singh said. "You get one to two emails, you get one to two calls every day."

A woman in a black outfit with white dots is pictured in front of gymnasium in a child care centre.
Charanjit Singh is a director at Huron Child Care on McPhillips Street in Winnipeg. She says she has around 200 people on a wait-list for 15 available licensed school-age spaces. (Josh Crabb/CBC)

The centre is expanding to a second location with new spaces for 52 infants and 68 preschoolers, because the wait-list for spots for thoseages is even longer.

There's been a surge in demand since $10-a-day child care was introduced this past April, Singh said.

Manitoba is planning to introduce 23,000 new child-care spaces by 2026 under a federal-provincialagreement, but those spaces are specifically for children under seven.

Jodie Kehl, executive director of the Manitoba Child Care Association, says expanding school-aged care needs to be a focus.

"Families that have children in young primary school years need child care very much, particularly during the school year,but then also on non-school days when the family still has to go to work but there's no school for their child," she said.

"It would take the investments and the political will of a provincial government to also then expand child care spaces for the seven- to 12-year-old children and fund those spaces accordingly."

A woman wearing a pink sweater is pictured in front of a banner that reads quality early learning & child care.
Manitoba Child Care Association executive director Jodie Kehl says more focus is needed on creating school-age child care spaces. (Josh Crabb/CBC)

Wait-lists exploded when $10-a-day care was announced, she said,but families are finding that doesn't mean they're guaranteed to get a spot.

The province has announced somespending on creating more school-age spaces, including aproject to help schools develop new spaces on-site.

But Ritchot said as a parent, she feels more needs to be done.

Ideally, "schools would have in-house daycares that would have enough spots for every child in their school," she said.

"It was super hectic" when her daughter went into Grade 1, "and we weren't sure if we could even keep our jobs,"said Ritchot.

"Not having available child care puts a whole lot of stress on us."