Fewer child-care spaces but more vacancies leave some Manitoba families scrambling - Action News
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Manitoba

Fewer child-care spaces but more vacancies leave some Manitoba families scrambling

Some centres have no space forchildren they welcomedbefore the pandemic, while other facilities which used to regularly turnfamilies awaynow have openings.

Even with openings, supply hasn't outstripped demand, 1 Winnipeg parent says

Some Manitoba families aren't sure where to turn, in order to find child-care spaces for their kids. (Franck Fife/AFP via Getty Images)

It maybe a scramble to find child-care spaces this fall, depending on where in Manitoba you're looking.

Some centres have no space forchildren they welcomedbefore the pandemic, while other facilities which used to regularly turnfamilies away now have openings.

JodieKehl with the Manitoba Child Care Association saidit's understandablesome families are hesitant to head back to daycare.

"I think that familiesare just really apprehensive about coming back, and legitimately so,"the executive director said.

They're fearful about whether they're ready to bring their children back into this type of environment."

In fact, a third of the child-care spaces operating before the pandemic aren't runningnow. The province says there are 23,800 spaces today, down from 37,000 before COVID-19 arrived, according to the Manitoba Child Care Association.

The province says that statistical comparison isn't fair, since more than 10,000 nursery and school-based programs don't operate in the summeranyway, according to a provincialspokesperson.

Daughter's space taken away

Butlooking beyond the numbers, there are still parents waiting for a child-care spot a familiar experience for those used to years-long wait lists.

Anna Weiersays their Winnipeg daycare no longer hadroomfor her daughter when spaces were prioritized for the children of essential workers.

"Both me and my partner are working from home, and it's very difficult to get our work done while also taking care of our child," she said.

"At the same time, right now we are living with a family member whois at highrisk for developing issues with COVID-19.I'm not sure that we would have been comfortable sending our child to child care, even if there was a space for us."

Anna Weier, with her daughter Libby, said child care has become complicated since her daycare stopped accepting her child. But even if it was open to her daughter, Anna worries she'd be potentially exposed to COVID-19. (Submitted/Anna Weier)

Of the 23,800 spaces operating, the province says there are4,000 vacancies.

Weier said the numbers alone don't show that supplyis outstripping demand.

"If you can find one spot, but it'sa 50-minute drive from your house that's not super helpful."

Scott Forbes, an early childhood educator in Winnipeg, said he knows a number of friends who are desperate to enrol their children, especially in the hours before and after school.

Each vacancy is a child, or a parent, left behind, explains Susan Prentice, a child-care researcher and University of Manitoba professor.

"Every centre that's operating today with a vacancy, somewhere there's a family that couldn't go back, couldn't afford it, lost their job, or is trying to juggle work from home," she said. "We are on the edge of a disaster for working parents."

Susan Prentice, sociology professor at the University of Manitoba, questions the way the government has handled child care during the pandemic. (Jaison Empson/CBC)

Prentice has long bemoaned the state of Manitoba's child-care sector, which has seen provincial funding frozen since 2016, low wages for workers and a wait list totalling 16,000 children as of 2018.

She doesn't think the government has responded appropriately during the pandemic, which began withall centres closing. The province has committed more money to home-based programs, including an $18-million pool of money, over publicly-fundedproviders, she said.

Play area fenced off

One of Winnipeg's largest child-care centres, the Discovery Children's Centre, has spent close to $20,000 adapting its indoor and outdoor spaces. Executive director Ron Blatz says they've fenced off areas of their St. James centre, and are trying to keep staff with separate groups of kids.

"The province of Manitoba hasn't given us one dollar to help accommodate that," Blatz said.

"We felt it was worth the [financial] risk to accommodate more children because every time we separated a space, we could add another cohort group."

Slowly, the 300-space centre is adding more children, while ensuring the kidsare divided into 30-person groups, as per provincial guidelines. Blatz expects to be at half-capacityin the coming weeks.

Ron Blatz, executive director of Discovery Children's Centre in Winnipeg, says they've had to cordoned off sections of their playground to ensure separation between cohorts of children. (Ian Froese/CBC)

They'vedeniedservice to some families. Blatz said the day program is only accepting children from two neighbourhood schools, rather than nine.

"We couldn't have children from nine schools coming here and mixing together," Blatz said, noting the 10 affected families have been understanding.

In Portage la Prairie, Lori Carpenter said her nursery schoolhas space for more kids. She's hasn't said that before.

"I've been at this job for 28 yearsnow and every year we've had a wait list of at least 25 or 30 names," said the executive director of the Portage Ukrainian Nursery School.

She said some parents are rightfully nervous about the risk of COVID-19 exposure. She's heard fromparentswaitinga few months before entertaining their child'sreturn to the nursery.

Even if it's slightly fewer children than she's used to, Carpenter says she'll be excited to see smiling faces when her nursery reopens next week.

"It'll be good for the soul and something well needed by children and staff alike."

With files from Radio-Canada's Julien Sahuquillo