This Sudbury, Ont., mother quit her job because she couldn't get affordable child care - Action News
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Sudbury

This Sudbury, Ont., mother quit her job because she couldn't get affordable child care

Parents in Sudbury, Ont., say they have to either stay home with their children or pay the higher cost of private child care due to long waitlists to access licensed, subsidized daycares under the national $10-a-day program.

Average wait time for a daycare spot in the city is 23 months

A man woman and child sitting on a couch.
Emilia Valente-Salhuana, shown with husband Hugo Salhuana and their son Fabrizio, says she had to quit her job when she couldn't afford private child care. (Submitted by Emilia Valente-Salhuana)

Emilia Valente-Salhuana of Sudbury, Ont., quit her job at a career college because she couldn't afford private daycare, which isn'tsubsidized by the Canada-wide Early Learning and Child Care (CWELCC) system.

"We don't have the funds to pay for a nanny or babysitter and we don't have family as well to provide care in the area," said the mother of a 16-month-old son. "So yeah, I had to quit my job."

Valente-Salhuana'slong wait for a child-care spotisn't unique.Waitlists across Ontario have risen dramaticallysince the province signed on to the national $10-a-day program.

Valente-Salhuana'sson has been on the city's child care registry since January 2023. She's expecting her second child in about a month.

The city says the average wait time for a daycare spot in Sudbury is now 23 months.

Valente-Salhuana said if she could get a spot in a licensed daycare, it would allow her to return to work.

"Right now we are struggling a little bit financially," she said.

"My husband does have a relatively good-paying job, but it's not enough. I need to get back into the workforce, whether it be 32 to 40 hours a week, just for us to kind of balance out a little better. It would make things easier."

Valente-Salhuana said sheloved her work as a financial aid administrator at the private college.

"It was a pretty good-paying job."

a wall features little month images made to look like a children's train. a stuffed giraffe and a bookshelf.
As of December, the City of Greater Sudbury had 4,029 children waiting for care on its list. (Darryl Dyck/The Canadian Press)

To get a spot in one of the city's 75 licensed daycares, parents or caregivers have to register with itschild-care registry.

"That online platform is monitored by children's services on a regular basis," said Miranda Mackie, manager of children's services for the City of Greater Sudbury.

"It allows us to capture real-time data about how many families we have waiting for care and in what age grouping as well."

Mackie recommends that parents get on the list as soon as they can, long before achild is born.

As of December,she said, 4,029 children wereon the waitlist.

A family posing with fall colours in the background.
Jennifer Seaward, right, poses with her partner Jaden Laver and children Hudson and Iris-Rose. (Submitted by Jennifer Seaward)

Jennifer Seaward said her seven-year-old son has been on the waitlist since 2019and her two-year-old daughter has been on it since January 2022.

A woman in black sitting at a desk.
Tracy Saarikoski is the executive director of Discovery Early Learning and Care in Sudbury. She says a labour shortage is the main cause for long child care waitlists in the city. (Jonathan Migneault/CBC)

Seaward's partner works full time;she's a student at Laurentian University. While they wait for spots to become available, they are paying for private home daycare.

"It's not able to be covered by the subsidy because it's a private daycare," she said.

"So I'm having to pay out of pocket $50 a day. That's $500 every two weeks, $1,000 a month. It's financially, a struggle"

Right now, she said, it's a struggle to cover basic expenses because of the high cost of daycare.

'Workforce in crisis'

Tracy Saarikoski is executive director of Discovery Early Learning and Care, which runs four child-care centres in Sudburyand serves around 450 children each day.

Saarikoski said the sector faces a labour shortage that has led to long waitlistsfor a child-care spot because centres like the ones she manages don't have enough staff.

"The workforce is in a crisis right now," she said.

"I work with the Ontario Coalition for Better Childcare and it's across the province, this workforce shortage. It's because of low wages, no benefits, no pension plans."

Saarikoski said Ontario has fallen behind other provinces such as Manitoba, British Columbia, Nova Scotia and Prince Edward Island that haveinvested more in child care since joining the federal CWELCC system.

In January, Ontario increased the starting wage for registered early childhood educators by 19 per cent, from $20 an hour to $23.86 per hour. Registered early childhood education program staff who make under$26 an hour are also eligible for annual wage increases of $1 per hour.

But Saarikoski said early childhood educators in daycares often make less thancolleagues at school boards. While her workers have a benefits package, she added, they don'thave access to a pension, as is the case in school boards.

"We hate that they're walking the floor and going across the hall," she said, referring to educatorswho transfer toschool boards to work in kindergarten classroomsor with younger children.

If she had funding to pay better wages and add employees to a pension plan, Saarikoski said, that would have the biggest impact on reducing the city's waitlist.

"Absolutely everybody deserves a spot and all families deserve access."

Education Minister Stephen Lecceacknowledged recently that the national child-care plan would undoubtedly mean increased demand, but Ontario is working to increase the number of spaces.

"We have a plan to increase spaces across the board, 86,000, and obviously the government is committed to keep building spaces well in excess to meet the demand of the families in the province."

With files from The Canadian Press