New rural daycare will keep Manitoba parents from crossing border - Action News
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Manitoba

New rural daycare will keep Manitoba parents from crossing border

A dozen toy tractors line the shelves, along with donated books and bins full of Mr. Potato Heads.

New rural daycare will keep Manitoba parents from crossing border. CBC's Jill Coubrough reports.

10 years ago
Duration 1:48
A dozen toy tractors line the shelves, along with donated books and bins full of Mr. Potato Heads.

A dozen toy tractors line the shelves, along with donated books and bins full of Mr. Potato Heads.

Andrea Guthrie, is putting the final touches on Pipestone, Man. first licensed day care.

"It's really exciting. It's been a long road," Guthrie told CBC News.

A milestone, three years in the making.

Before this space, finding child care in the municipality has been virtually impossible.

There are no licensed facilities in the Rural Municipality of Pipestone.

The closest one is in a town30 minutesaway.

According to the province's child care data base, there are no vacancies at child care facilities in western Manitoba, leaving some parents like Guthrie crossing the border into Saskatchewan.

Others have been calling in sick or have had to quit their jobsto look after their children.

"It has been extremely difficult I have been having to get my mother who lives fivehours away to come sometimes - for months - to help me out," Charlene Campbell said. The mother of three said she's not been able to return to full-time work after having kids and even part-time workis sometimes unmanageable.

"Sometimes it was so stressful that you just wanted to give up, and it's just not worth it to go to work because you're worrying who's watching your kids."

'A huge stress reliever'

"[This daycare] going to be a huge stress reliever," Campbell said.

Mother of two Carrie Denbow showed up to the New Reston Early Learning Centre to register her daughters.

She and her husband have had to reduce workhours and change positions at their jobsto make it work.

"It's been very difficult.I've been looking for somebody eversince I had Chloe and she's going to be seven," she said.

The centre will be a gift for parents like Denbow and Campbell, but the battle nowbecomes securing a spot.

Guthrie, president of the Reston Early Learning Centre, said the demand far exceeds what they were able to build.

The daycare can currently take 20 children and fourinfants. They have the capacity to expand, but not the staff or any provincial funding.

Guthrie received 60 applications during the open house.

The project has been been funded by the municipalityand local business, and Guthrie said it's a huge step in the right direction.

"I think we'll see economic benefits within the community, I think we'll see new families move here, it's really huge for the area," he said.

The Reston Early Learning Centre is awaiting a provincial inspection before it opens its doors, likely in early November.