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Sudbury

Staffing woes cause spike in daycare costs

Rising staffing costs and the refusal of the province to provide predictable funding are major reasons why parents are paying more for the service, Sudbury daycare representatives say.

All-day kindergarten drawing away qualified workers

Daycare operators are passing the rising cost of qualified staff to families. (iStock) (iStock)

Rising staffing costs and the refusal of the province to provide predictable funding are the major reasons why parents are paying more for the service, Sudbury daycare representatives say.

Many child-care workers are jumping to the all-day kindergarten program because of the higher pay offered by school boards, Mary-Lou Coffey, executive director at Walden Day Care, told CBC News.

The competition has forced daycares to bump up wages and improve benefit packages to keep qualified workers, Coffey said, andthose costs end up being passedto parents.

"We've got families saying their child-care costs are more than their mortgageit's the highest portion of their family budget."

Coffey says the province should give daycare centres a set budget for the year, rather than basing funding on the ever-changing number of children enrolled. The number of children attendingher daycare often fluctuates, she said, and it took a serious dip during the year-long miners' strike in Sudbury.

"Agencies need to know that they have an x-amount of dollars coming in so they can pay these bills," Coffey said.

Greg Humphrey with the Association of Day Care Operators of Ontario agrees.

"The equivalent would be, say, going into a coffee shop and telling them they can't sell coffee any more, but they can keep selling everything else on their menu," Humphrey said, addingif the province doesn't find a way to stabilize the industry dozens of daycare centres could go out of business.