Child-care costs are dropping across Canada. But some families are still waiting years for spaces - Action News
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British Columbia

Child-care costs are dropping across Canada. But some families are still waiting years for spaces

Advocates say governments' efforts to lower child care fees has been successful to a point. Prices have dropped significantly across the country, but despite billions in extra funding, theres still not enough spaces to meet demand.

Some daycares are closing waitlists due to high demand, as advocates call for funds for more staff, expansion

Mom holds baby and has her daughter next to them.
Ashima Arora says she has been on waitlists for almost two years for her 15-month-old son. (Baneet Braich/CBC)

Ashima Arora was three months pregnant when she began looking for child care in British Columbia's Lower Mainland.

Today, Arora'sson is 15 months old, but she's still waiting for a spaceon seven different waitlists. On the longest listshe's No. 198 in line,while the earliest available space might not comeuntil September, she says.

"It's a nightmare," said Arora, 35, as her sonMankaranwobbledacross the floor oftheir Chilliwack, B.C., apartment, squeezing a Peppa Pig toy. She said she's had to delay returning to work because she hasn't been able to find child care.

Parents across Canada are facinglong waits to access child careand experts say those waits are growing longer, even asOttawa deliverson a long-held promise to invest in an affordable child-care system.

In 2021, the federal government announced it would invest $30 billion over five years to reduce fees for parents across Canada, earmarking about $3.2 billion for B.C.The goal was to increase access to $10-a-day child care.

B.C. began testing $10-a-daychild carewith 1,300spacesin 2018 as part of an election promise by the NDP. Backed by federal funding, thatnumber has grown to 13,200.Other efforts to drive down daycare prices includeafee-reduction plan for more than 80,000 spaces.

Advocates say these investments have been life-changing for many families, lowering some fees by halfbut, ultimately, there still aren't enough spaces to meet demand.

Sharon Gregson with theCoalition of Child Care Advocates of B.Csays while there are about 130,000 licensed child-care spacesin the province, 75 per cent of children age0-12 aren't able to access them.

In fact, as fees dropped, waitlists lengthened,Gregson said. Now, some daycares are even closing their waitlists.

WATCH | Parents waiting for child care say they are unable to work:

B.C. woman has been waiting years for child care for her son

7 months ago
Duration 3:45
Parents who are waiting months to years for child care say they are unable to work and are getting frustrated by the uncertainty. Despite significant investments to lower child care fees, advocates say there are still not enough spaces.

Using the provincial government's B.C. Child Care Map, which lists child-care centres and vacancies, CBC News looked at providers who are part of the fee-reduction program and admit children under 36 months.

The map showed 122 of 755 child-care facilities had spaces free on Jan. 18, but it wasn't clear how many spots were available in each. The province says the accuracy of available spots on the map depends on whetherchild-care providers have updated their information, and they donot include $10-a-day child care providers.

Gregson said spaces sit empty because there aren't enough educators to staff them and many people are struggling financially,meaning they simply can't afford child carewhich, outside of government programs, can cost a median of between$1,000 and$1,625 a month in B.C. for kids under 36 months,according to a provincial document from August 2023.

The province says $10-a-day spaces make up just nine per cent of the total number of child care spaces in B.C.

Frustration with waits grows

The long waitlists arefrustratingfor child-care advocates as well as parents, despite acknowledgement that the price-reduction programsare a positive development.

In 2023, the average amount Canadian parents paid for their main full-time arrangement was$544 per month, down from $649 in 2022, according to a new Statistics Canada report.

However, the number of parents who say it's been difficult to get child care increased from 53 to 62 per cent, according to the same report.

"I feel that it is an ongoing struggle," saidMorna Ballantyne, executive director of Childcare Now, Canada's national child care advocacy association.

She says part of the solution is working with local governments to open up daycares in public spaces like schools, whilehelping current operators expand.

"They are having a lot of trouble getting access to the kinds of capital fundsrequired to actually either renovate space, expand existing space, or build new centres on space," Ballantyne said.

Calls to fundmore staff

Shining Star Daycare director Michelle Johnson echoes Ballantyne's point about support for expansion.

Since the facility in Coquitlam, B.C., began providing $10-a-day care in 2022,interest soared to the point where it had toclosesome of its waitlists, Johnson said.

"We didn't want to give the parents false hope. There is zero chance of them getting in, " saidJohnson, sitting in one of the facility'snine classroomsas children sang in the hallway.

She says about 200 families have not made it into their programs, andsome parents are facing a three-year wait.

Woman in orange shirt looks off into distance at her daycare.
Michelle Johnson, director of Shining Stars Daycare says they have had to close waitlists recently due to high demand. (Baneet Braich/CBC)

Along with more support for expansion, Johnson says the government needs to fund more child-care staff.

"If daycares can't find the spaces can't staff the spaces, all that money is not going to do any good," she said.

A November 2022 reportby the Early Childhood Educators of B.C. (ECEBC) found45 per centof employers are losing more staff than they can hire due to reasons such as low pay and a lack of benefits.

In 2018, the government said it will need an additional 12,000 child-care professionals over the next 10 years to expandaffordable child care.

Children's shoes as they sit at a table.
The B.C. government says it is adding more than 2,200 new $10-a-day spaces by the spring of 2024. (Baneet Braich/CBC)

A bursary program launched the same yearis helpingcover up to $5,000 in education costs for those hoping to work in the sector.

More than 12,000 bursaries have been awarded to students between the winter 2021 and summer 2023 semesters, according to ECEBCexecutive director Emily Mlieczko.

"We continue to see a huge increase in students accessing this fund and other opportunities through government initiatives," she said.

New research shows that childcare in Canada is on average becoming more affordable, but its becoming harder to find a spot. Matt Galloway talks to parents struggling to find care, and checks in on the federal governments pledge to provide $10-a-day childcare by 2026.

More than 2,200 new $10/day spaces by spring: province

TheMinistry of Education and Child Care acknowledgesthere is still work to do.

One way it'sreducing waits, it says, is withtheNew Spaces Fundwherealocal government or school can get funding to help open a new child-care centre if it offers reduced fees.

The ministry says it has funded more than 33,000 new licensed child-care spaces since 2018, and more than 15,000 of these spaces are now open.

B.C. will be funding more than 2,200 $10-a-day spaces by the spring, it adds, bringing the total number of $10-a-day spots to 15,000.

The province also says it's supporting more child-care staffin multiple ways,including paying higher wagesand helping with education costs.

Mom holding a toddler
Ashima Arora says without childcare she is unable to work and relying on her husband's income. (Baneet Braich/CBC)

But parents who are still waiting to access child care say those changes aren't happening fast enough, leaving them either unable to return to the workforce,working fewer hours, or scrambling to find babysitters.

"I have to stay home, I have no choice," Arora said, adding she's declined four job offers to care for her son.

"It hurts when you don't have enough resources."

Corrections

  • A previous version of this story said there are about 130,000 licensed child-care providers in the province. In fact, there are about 130,000 licensed child-care spaces.
    Jan 20, 2024 6:45 PM PT
  • A previous version of this story said B.C. will be funding about 15,000 new $10-a-day spaces by spring. In fact, the province will be funding more than 2,200 new $10-a-day spots by then, bringing the total number of $10-a-day child-care spaces to 15,000.
    Jan 20, 2024 6:56 PM PT