Thursday, January 1, 2026
ADVT 
National

Group calls for daycares and schools to align

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 28 Jul, 2021 01:26 PM
  • Group calls for daycares and schools to align

Canada is losing out on the benefits of early childhood education due to a disconnect between daycares and schools, says a newly released report that recommends integrating child care into the broader education system.

The research from People for Education said a proper child-care setup would help give kids the skills they need to carry them through life, including communication and critical and creative thinking.

But the inequitable, pricey and poorly co-ordinated Canadian system doesn't pass muster, the group said.

"Policy and practices that are the focus of early learning in most Canadian jurisdictions often 'fade out' when children enter elementary school due to a lack of continuity and common goals through all the stages of our education systems," the report reads.

As it stands, access to early learning varies based on province.

The report said 73 per cent of two- to four-year-old children have a space in the child-care system, and early childhood educators have a salary roughly 66 per cent of the average teacher's salary.

In Saskatchewan, however, it said that only 27 per cent of that age group have access to a spot in daycare and ECE workers receive just 37 per cent of the average teacher's salary.

Access also varies within the provinces, the report reveals.

In the last academic year, 84 per cent of elementary schools with the top 10 per cent of average family incomes had child care on location, the report said, citing a survey of 1,000 school principals in the province.

That compares to just 66 per cent of schools with the lowest family incomes.

"In 2020-2021, one in four schools still report no access to child care, and principals report that cost and availability continue to pose limitations for some communities," the report reads.

The group said the federal government's commitment in this year's budget to spend $30 billion over five years on child care provides an opportunity to replace the disjoined system with an integrated approach, starting young.

"Early learning and child care must be publicly funded, publicly governed, and embedded in our public education systems," the report reads.

The report points to recent deals Ottawa has reached with both British Columbia and Nova Scotia on child-care funding.

The agreement with B.C. aims to create 30,000 new spaces in the province in the next five years, with average fees for regulated spaces cut in half to $21 per day by the end of 2022 and hitting $10 per day for children under six by 2027.

The $605-million deal with Nova Scotia would halve the average child-care fees in the province by the end of next year, to $20 a day per child. The program, he added, would gradually lower them over five years to $10 a day.

Prince Edward Island agreed to Ottawa's plan on Tuesday, and is set to receive $120 million from the feds.

Prime Minister Justin Trudeau was expected to announce Wednesday that Newfoundland and Labrador had also signed on.

A spokesman for Ontario's education minister did not immediately respond to a request for comment Wednesday.

MORE National ARTICLES

B.C. Supreme Court expands to Port Coquitlam

B.C. Supreme Court expands to Port Coquitlam
Three courtrooms not being used by the provincial court will be assigned to hear higher court cases involving divorce, disputes over $35,000 or other civil disputes.

B.C. Supreme Court expands to Port Coquitlam

Vancouver Police appeal for witnesses in the homicide of Mr.Manoj Kumar

Vancouver Police appeal for witnesses in the homicide of Mr.Manoj Kumar
Just after 8:30 p.m. on April 16, 2019, Vancouver Police received several 9-1-1 calls reporting shots being fired against Kumar in the area of West 4th Avenue and Burrard Street. Mr. Kumar tragically died at the scene. 

Vancouver Police appeal for witnesses in the homicide of Mr.Manoj Kumar

Expectations high as Liberals ready budget

Expectations high as Liberals ready budget
Provinces will be looking for more health-care cash, small businesses for an extension of emergency aid, and credit-rating agencies for certainty that historic deficits and debts will be tamed over time.

Expectations high as Liberals ready budget

Feds pressed to push back tax-filing deadline

Feds pressed to push back tax-filing deadline
Quebec on Thursday announced it was pushing back the filing deadline until the end of May and waiving charging interest on balances owing through the same month

Feds pressed to push back tax-filing deadline

Trudeau sending Ontario help, Pfizer supply bolstered

Trudeau sending Ontario help, Pfizer supply bolstered
Trudeau announced Friday a contract with Pfizer for an additional eight million doses of their vaccine, hours after Canada said its incoming supply from Moderna would be slashed in half through the rest of April.

Trudeau sending Ontario help, Pfizer supply bolstered

Opposition urged to speed up net-zero carbon bill

Opposition urged to speed up net-zero carbon bill
If debate does not end today, Wilkinson asks opposition leaders to consider supporting the government's use of what he calls "the parliamentary tools available" to force an end to second reading debate.

Opposition urged to speed up net-zero carbon bill