Daycare centres struggle with staffing as pandemic drags on - Action News
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Ottawa

Daycare centres struggle with staffing as pandemic drags on

A daycare provider in Ottawa says child-care staffing shortages amplified by the pandemic have forced her to reduce hours and cut the size of a cohort.

Daycare owner says she cut 5 toddler spaces, reduced hours due to lack of qualified staff

Karen Bolton is the director of the Churchill Carling Daycare, which has two locations in Ottawa's Westboro neighbourhood. She said staffing has been a huge problem during the pandemic. (Robyn Miller/CBC)

A daycare provider in Ottawa says child-care staffing shortages amplified by the pandemic have forced her to reduce hours and cut the size of a cohort.

Karen Bolton runs three daycares in the nation's capital, including one in the rural west-end community ofKinburn and two locations in the city's Westboro neighbourhood.

She's been in the business for three decades, but said the past 18 months have been incredibly stressfulwith the highest turnover of staff she hasseen.

"The wait-list is still long, but unfortunately I just, I don't have the staff at this particular point to bring in the kids that need the care," Bolton said.

Her daycare centre on Churchill Avenueis currently operating on reduced hours, while the toddler program currently has only 10children, instead of the maximum of 15.

Shelves with little kids' shoes
Some child-care centres in Ottawa have been operating at lower capacity because they can't find enough staff. (CBC)

'Nobody was applying'

She said she couldn't find early childhood educators (ECE) qualified to fill an open position.

"Nobody was applying and no one had credentials ... so we ended up having to go at a loss without five additional children. So it's been really tough. Both my other programs are struggling with the same deal as well," she said.

That has been extra tough, Bolton added, since toddler spaces bring in more revenue than preschool spaces.

A study released in June by Statistics Canada found employment among child-care workers was 21 per cent lower in February 2021 than it was before the COVID-19 pandemic in February 2020.

At the time, economists and others working in child-care predicted many of those employees who left or were laid off would not return to the sector.

A 'perfect storm'

The staffing struggle is being felt by daycare centres across the province, according to Kristine Berg, executive director of a child-care staffing agency in Ottawa.

She said the pandemic was the Ontario child-care sector's "perfect storm," highlighting staffing issues that already existed.

"We're always having that revolving door making sure that we meet the ratios and we place quality individuals in the child-care sector," Berg said.

The director of Brown Bear Day Care says child-care staff are feeling burnt out because of the challenges of working with young children while also wearing full personal protective equipment. (Robyn Miller/CBC)

She attributes the latest staffing shortage in the child-care sector to many different factors. They include staff who continue to rely on government benefits, people who are nervous to work with unvaccinated children, and COVID-19 vaccines becoming mandatory.

"The demand [for ECEs] has definitely increased for sure. It's a good time to be a staffing agency, we are getting a lot of new customers and we are happy to help," Berg said.

ECE burnout

Tamara Brown, director of Brown Bear Day Care in the west-end community of Stittsville, said some of her staff are reporting burnout after months of working with babies and toddlers while wearing personal protective equipment (PPE).

She said many ECEs are also trying to take care of their own children who are dealing withCOVID-19 cases at their schools or daycares.

"The hope that this is going to be over is kind of waning, as well, which is tough," Brown said.

Brown Bear Day Care in Stittsville has a sign outside thanking those working on the front lines of the pandemic. (Robyn Miller/CBC)

ECEs who work in daycares make between $16 and 20 per hour, whichis set by individual daycare providers, but the funding comes from the province and is funnelled through municipalities.

To entice more workers to stay or enter the profession, Brown wants the provincial government to consider a higher wage enhancement for ECEs than the extra $2 per hourintroduced by the Liberals in 2014.

"Without early educators, people can't work. So I mean, that's a big spoke in the community's economy," she said.

Emergency roundtable

On Wednesday, the Association of Early Childhood Educators Ontario held an emergency roundtable on the child-care workforce shortage.

More than 300 educators and others working in the child-care sector attended the meeting to share stories and push the province for higher wages and better working conditions.

"We did a survey in the spring of the ECE workforce, where 42 per cent of respondents said they had considered leaving the sector since the onset of the pandemic ... and we're at a point where we really need the province to step up with some sustainable long-term solutions," said Alana Powell, the association's executive director.

In a written statement, a spokesperson for Education Minister Stephen Lecce said the government "recognizes the hard work of our early-years and child-care sector and appreciate the insights they continue to share with us on what's needed to support the sector."

The statement also pointed out Ontario recently signed a new agreement that provides nearly $150 million in funding to "support the retention and recruitment of high-quality child-care and early-years employees."