Canada’s $10-a-Day Daycare Undergoes Audit Due to Complaints
Canada’s auditor general has announced plans to evaluate the effectiveness of the federal child care program, as providers continue to voice concerns about the program’s impact on the sector and ability to meet its stated goals.
The office of the auditor general is in the process of launching an audit of the Canada-Wide Early Learning and Child Care program (CWELCC) and is considering involving provincial auditors general in the investigation, said Auditor General Karen Hogan. She made the remarks in a July 18 letter reviewed by The Epoch Times and sent to the Association of Day Care Operators of Ontario (ADCO), the industry association for the province’s daycare providers.
The association had asked for a review of the federal program to assess whether it is sustainable for taxpayers, provincial governments, and child care licensees.
“To date, [the federal daycare program] hasn’t delivered on [its] promise,” Andrea Hannen, executive director of the ADCO, wrote in a May 22 letter to Ms. Hogan.
“The program may in fact be having such a detrimental impact on Canada’s licensed child care sector that many families who rely on the program are at risk of losing access not just to their $10-per-day spaces, but to any licensed spaces at all.”
Ms. Hannen’s request was co-signed by other national and provincial child care operators, including the Canadian Council of Montessori Administrators, the Alberta Association of Childcare Entrepreneurs, and the Ontario Federation of Independent Schools.
But the program has met with criticism, especially from child care providers, who says government funding is not sufficient to cover the cost of operations. YMCA Ontario, which provides nearly one-fifth of the province’s child care spots, said funding shortfalls can result in programs closing at a time when they should be expanding.
“This is because the current approach to revenue replacement funding is insufficient, leaving many non-profit operators with deficits and uncertain outlooks as we negotiate with each municipality for pressure funding.”
In addition to funding problems, child care providers in Canada face another problem that has been brewing since the pandemic: labour shortages.
Ms. Hannen asked the auditor general to find out whether licensed spaces have increased or shrunk because of the federal program, and if the government has plans to address staffing shortages that have prevented centres from running at full capacity.