Sunday, July 5, 2026
ADVT 
National

Changes To Popular Child Care Fund To Maximize Spaces

11 Feb, 2020 06:10 PM

    In the past 15 months, the Province has supported the fastest creation of licensed child care spaces in B.C.’s history.


    Government has provided funding for more than 10,400 new spaces through its three space-creation initiatives – the Childcare BC New Spaces Fund, Start-Up Grants and neighbourhood learning centres – with thousands more to come.


    Due to the success of the biggest of these programs, the Childcare BC New Spaces Fund, the Province is updating guidelines and sharing best practices with applicants to better support projects in communities with an acute need for new child care spaces.


    Starting Feb. 10, 2020, the Childcare BC New Spaces Fund will accept applications through two application windows. The first of these will open Feb. 10 and end May 11, 2020. Successful applicants will be notified by August 2020. A second application window is scheduled to open in November 2020, ending Feb. 10, 2021.


    This approach enables the Province to compare applications over a set timeframe. This will allow funding to be targeted to organizations and communities best able to meet child care shortages in their areas and to prioritize applications that create child care spaces that will remain community assets for the long term. As well, communities that have recently completed child care needs assessments will have more time to develop targeted applications based on what they have learned.


    In addition, to ensure funding is being used for new licensed child care spaces in as many communities as possible, and based on best practices identified through the 15 months of the program, the Province will prioritize projects with a cost per space of $40,000 or less.


    Applicants will be required to demonstrate:


    the link between their proposed project and the need within their community;


    reference to a community child care plan or needs assessment, such as those created through the Union of British Columbia Municipalities’ Community Child Care Planning Grant program; and


    that any necessary professional, administrative and consulting services total no more than 15% of the total provincially funded project cost.

    MORE National ARTICLES

    Assisted-Dying Activist Audrey Parker Remembered At Halifax 'Celebration Of Life'

    HALIFAX — Hundreds of people gathered Friday afternoon to remember a terminally ill Halifax woman whose fight to loosen assisted dying laws captured national attention as she dispensed wisdom about life from the "bed of truth" where she spent her last days.

    Assisted-Dying Activist Audrey Parker Remembered At Halifax 'Celebration Of Life'

    Coroner's Inquest Calls For More Vancouver Police Training After Fatal Shooting

    Coroner's Inquest Calls For More Vancouver Police Training After Fatal Shooting
    VANCOUVER — More de-escalation training for Vancouver police is being recommended after a coroner's inquest into the shooting death of a man who was stabbing people on the city's Downtown Eastside.

    Coroner's Inquest Calls For More Vancouver Police Training After Fatal Shooting

    Ice-Making Company Fined $350,000 After Fish Killed In Surrey, B.C., Creek

    SURREY, B.C. — An ice-making company in Surrey, B.C., has been fined $350,000 after an  solution purged from its equipment ended up in the city's storm sewer system that flows into a creek where fish were killed.

    Ice-Making Company Fined $350,000 After Fish Killed In Surrey, B.C., Creek

    Sagar Virk, Sandeep Mathroo And Manjit Bahia With Ties To Gang Conflict Arrested In Surrey

    Sagar Virk, Sandeep Mathroo And Manjit Bahia With Ties To Gang Conflict Arrested In Surrey
    On October 29, 2018 the Surrey Gang Enforcement Team (SGET) began an investigation into a report of Uttering Threats, and Unlawful Possession of a Firearm.

    Sagar Virk, Sandeep Mathroo And Manjit Bahia With Ties To Gang Conflict Arrested In Surrey

    WATCH: John Horgan, Andrew Wilkinson Clash In Electoral Reform Debate

    The politicians often talked over one another during the heated televised discussion on the province's voting referendum, with Horgan pushing a switch to proportional representation and Wilkinson defending the current first-past-the-post process.

    WATCH: John Horgan, Andrew Wilkinson Clash In Electoral Reform Debate

    Walk-In Doctors Want Equal Pay But Group Says Relationship With Patients Key

    Walk-In Doctors Want Equal Pay But Group Says Relationship With Patients Key
    VANCOUVER — Doctors at over 300 walk-in clinics in British Columbia want fair payment for their work compared with those in full family practice, says the head of an association that's rallying its members to increase access and profits through innovative technology.

    Walk-In Doctors Want Equal Pay But Group Says Relationship With Patients Key