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Toronto

Here's what Ontario child-care centres must do to reopen Friday

One child care watchdog is already warning the government's reopening plan is "half baked," and that many centres won't be able to open by this Friday.

The province's education minister is already acknowledging many centres will need more time

Three young children sit around a small table with two adults in a colourful daycare setting.
Child-care centres won't look like this when they reopen in Ontario. The government unveiled its strict COVID-19 guidelines for centres, which could reopen as soon as Friday, late on Tuesday night. (Rawpixel.com/Shutterstock)

The Ford government announced Tuesday that child-care centres could reopen across the province on Friday but only if those centres can put proper guidelines in place.

However, child-care operators were only givendetailed guidelines late Tuesday night, two people involved in the industry told CBC Radio's Metro Morning on Wednesday. Carolyn Ferns, the public policy co-ordinator for the Ontario Coalition for Better Child Care, blasted the government's plan as "half baked."

Ontario's education minister is already acknowledging many centres will need more time to open their doors.Local medical officers of health can also set their own timelines for reopening child-care centres in their regions if they feel it's too soon to do so this Friday.

Toronto Public Health has already signalled that it will not green light the reopening onFriday. In a statement to CBC News, the agency said it is still working "to ensure that appropriate guidance is available for child-care centres as soon as possible.

"TheMinistry of Education also requires that training on preventive measures be provided to all child care staff and providers prior to reopening, which is not likely to occur by this Friday," the statement continued.

The provincial government is also not providing any additional funding to the sector, raising questions about who will pay for things like personal protective equipment.The government's guidelines urge "where possible, wear gloves when interacting with high-touch areas."

The Ontario Coalition for Better Child Care is calling for a tripling of government child-care funding in order tocover additional costs associated with the new safety measures, the need for more workers and a potential loss in revenue.

Ontario Education Minister shares details about the reopening of child-care centres.

4 years ago
Duration 2:43
Ontario has announced that child-care centres across the province can reopen as soon as Friday, June 12.

Child care centres that do not comply with the guidelines face stiff fines, the provincehas warned.

'The mathematics aren't going to work'

Emergency child-care centres thathave stayed open during the pandemicoffer a preview of life under the new guidelines.

Carol Norton, owner-operator of theAll About Kids child-care centres, said the safety precautions have required a number of major adjustments and the need for additional workers.

At her centre in Markham, which has stayed open to serveessential workers, she said staff now spend much of their time operating"almost an assembly line of cleaning" as well as overseeing strict new measures to ensure children aren't sharing toys.

She estimated those changes have driven up operating costs by about 30 per cent, which includes personal protective equipment andhigher wages for staff who have continued working during the crisis. Norton said operating under the new safety guidelines will be unsustainablewithout additional funding.

"I can't see how centres would be able to do it financially," Norton said onMetro Morning. "The mathematics aren't going to work."

Tiny Bubbles Childcarein Whitchurch-Stoufville offered a more scathing review of Ontario's plan, calling the government "grossly misinformed" about the challenges facing the sector.

"The Ministry of Education has done nothing to help the [child-care centres], other than threatening us with heavy fines ifwe do not comply," wrote treasurer Rudy Teunissen in an email to Lecce, also shared with CBC News.

Here are the basic requirements child-care centres need to put in place. Read below for the detailed guidelines sent to child-care centres this week.

Children and staff will be limited to groups of 10 or fewer.
All children and staff must be screened for symptoms daily.
Thorough cleaning of the centre before opening and during the day.
The removal of toys that are likely to spread germs.
Requirement for a COVID-19 response plan if a staff member or child is exposed to the virus.
Permitting only "essential"visitors.
Pick-up and drop-off protocols that allow for physical distancing.

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With files from Nick Boisvert and The Canadian Press