Extra $385K meant to help more P.E.I. child-care centres meet higher bar - Action News
Home WebMail Saturday, November 16, 2024, 12:08 AM | Calgary | -0.7°C | Regions Advertise Login | Our platform is in maintenance mode. Some URLs may not be available. |
PEI

Extra $385K meant to help more P.E.I. child-care centres meet higher bar

Prince Edward Island's education minister says child-care centres will beeligible to apply for money from a pool of $385,000 to help them prepare to launch a pre-kindergarten program in the fall of 2021.

Staff recruitment and retention are the highest priority, Brad Trivers says

P.E.I.'s education minister says he would like to see all P.E.I. four-year-olds enrolled in some kind of pre-kindergarten. (Iam Anupong/Shutterstock)

Prince Edward Island's education minister says that child-care centres will beeligible to apply for cash froma pool of $385,000 to help them prepare to launch a pre-kindergarten program in the fall of 2021.

The free, half-day pre-kindergarten program for four-year-olds promised by the King government was supposed to beginin fall 2020, but that had to bedelayed due to the COVID-19 pandemic.

On Thursday, the province announced the funding to help up to eight centres meet the criteria for Early Years Centre designation including following a curriculum set out by the province. The money will fund enhanced wages for centre staff, as well as help modify spaces and allow the hiring ofan early childhood coach.

"The two key areas, of course, are spaces and then just having the qualified individuals to deliver the curriculum as teaching professionals," said Education Minister Brad Trivers.

Province wants all4-year-olds in pre-K

Trivers said applications will be available as of Monday, and the province plans to disperse funding early in the new year.

Trivers says the $385,000 will go to enhanced wages, improvements to buildings and to hire a early childhood education coach. (Wayne Thibodeau/CBC)

He said the centres continue to recruit qualified staff, and he hopes there will be enough by the time the new pre-kindergarten program launches in the fall.

"This is all in preparation to make sure all Islanders have access to good-quality child care," Trivers said. "This means we'll have the spaces, and it'll give incentive to more early childhood educators to get trained, and we'll be able to successfully launch our universal pre-K in the fall."

Three-quarters of P.E.I. four-year-olds are already enrolled in some form of pre-kindergarten, he said.

"We're really targeting that last 25 per cent or so, to bring them in," Trivers said.

More from CBC P.E.I.

With files from Jessica Doria-Brown