Parents, early-childhood educators offer province suggestions to improve daycare - Action News
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Ottawa

Parents, early-childhood educators offer province suggestions to improve daycare

More than 100 people attended an Ontario government town hall on daycare in Ottawa Monday night as the province prepares to put in place new guidelines for daycare centres.

Province seeks input as it prepares to draft new guidelines for daycare centres

Christie Saikaly has two young children, one in school and the other in daycare. She said at a provincial town hall Monday night that the rising cost of daycare is her top concern. (Steve Fischer)

The rising cost of daycare was the main concern at a provincial town hall at Ottawa's Shaw Centre Monday evening.

Parents raised concerns about the increasing cost of sending their children to daycare, while early-childhood educators expressed worry about having enough money to hire sufficientstaffto keep more daycare spaces open.

Ontario's Ministry of Education is preparing to draft new guidelines including programming requirements for how both licensed and unlicensed daycare centres operate but first officials want to hear from residents.

More than 100people turned out to share their experiencesand offer suggestions on how to improvedaycare in Ontario.

Costs for parents, compensation for providers

Christie Saikaly, a mother of two young children, said affordability is a common worry.

"At the top of everyparent's list is probably cost," she said.

She added that she doesn't want costs to be cut at the expense of quality, so she also wants to see strong regulations.

"So that means educators who are educated, can provide quality care to my children, who know what they need, can provide the comfort and teach the resiliency skills and all those good things that the kids will need in thefuture," Saikaly said.

Other parents said they were having difficulty finding daycare spaces and welcome the Ontario government'scommitment to add 100,000 daycare spaces for children up to the age of four across Ontario over the next five years.

Early childhood educator Donna Mortimer has worked in daycare centres for most of the past 25 years. She said parents are paying too much to sustain the system. (Steve Fischer)

'Parents paying far too much'

Donna Mortimer has worked in the daycare field for almost a quarter of a century. She wants both the provincialand federal governments to work together to fund a national childcare program.

"Ithink it's outrageous that our pay is dependent on parents paying far too much for child care," she said.

"It's a crazy situation. I don'tsee how anyone can afford childcare and if we don't pay staff properly, they won't stay."

Indira Naidoo-Harris, the Ontariominister responsible for early years and child care, saidthe new regulations are meant to addressconcerns she's heard not only in Ottawa but more than a dozen other communities she's visiting this month.

"Part of these consultations are about affordability, accessibility, quality and, of course, responsiveness. So how do we go about creating a system that really meets the diverse needs of communities and families across the province? And absolutely, affordability is a key part of that," Naidoo-Harris said.

She hopes to have the guidelines in place by the end of February.

Indira Naidoo-Harris, the Minister Responsible for Early Years and Child Care, attended Monday's town hall in Ottawa. (Steve Fischer)