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Montreal

Continuing their 'win-win partnership,' Quebec town and daycare worked together to build playground for tots

The Quebec town of Sainte-Martine and a public daycare have unveiled a new play structure for kids aged 18 months to five, paid for by the daycare, on donated municipal land, as part of an eight-year collaboration.

Daycare, playground module the results of 8-year project

From left, Genevive Tardif, the director of recreation, sports, culture and community life for the municipality of Sainte-Martine, Marie-Pier Leduc, the director of the CPE Maison des Copains, and Maude Laberge, mayor of Sainte-Martine, at the new playground module. (Submitted by Audrey Caza/Sainte-Martine)

The town of Sainte-Martine, in the Montrgie, is celebrating another milestone in its ongoing collaboration with a local daycare, the Centre de la petite enfance(CPE) Maison des Copains.

The partners have unveiled a new play structure for kids aged 18 months to five, paid for by the daycare, on donated municipal land.

The project is the result of an eight-year working relationshipbetween the municipality and the CPEand it comesas many municipalities say they can be part of the solution for the currentdaycare shortage. They're calling on the provincial government to work more closely with them on daycare issues.

"It's a real win-win partnership," said Mlanie Lefort, a two-term city councillor in Sainte-Martine, who's currently running for mayor.

The Federation of Quebec Municipalities says local governments have a better notion of what the needs are in their communities and they say they can help setup services.

In Lefort's town, the municipality donated land to build a CPE in exchange for having access to a room in the building for after-hours community activities. The daycare and the community roomopened two years ago.

The city sometimes holds council meetings there, and the room is accessible to any person or organization in the community to book for free.

The new playground module wasthe next step in the project.

"It was a really long process, but it was worth it," said Lefort, explaining discussions started several years ago.

Both the CPE and the new play structure are also strategically located: near a municipal pool, two baseball diamondsand another playground for older children.

Lefort said it's a way to use public funds to help alleviate the shortage of daycare spots, but it also serves the community as a whole.

"I think we really need all municipalities to have these discussions and be open-minded," Lefort said. "I think it's a partnership model that can be spread across our province to make sure we have new spots."

Municipal group hopesto see similar partnerships elsewhere

The Federation of Quebec Municipalities is also encouraging other communities to try similar projects.

"We have to be innovative," said Claire Bolduc, a spokesperson for the FQM and prefect for the MRC Tmiscamingue. "In the current context, innovation is key, particularly in the context of worker shortages and at the family level."

Bolduc said daycare services are essential, and the province needs to do more to equip municipalities to find creative solutions, like the partnership in Sainte-Martine.

With reporting by Marika Wheeler

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