Thank you, Mr. Chair and honourable members of the committee. Thank you for the opportunity to appear here today.
Child care is a key component for securing Canada's place in a competitive world. I'm very pleased to represent the Canadian Child Care Federation, Canada's largest early learning and child care organization. The federation is a vibrant partnership of 21 affiliates--provincial and territorial organizations--representing over 11,500 members. These members are primarily child care practitioners, working in centres and family child care settings across Canada, who are focused on excellence in early learning and child care.
The Conference Board of Canada has said that improving Canada's productivity is the country's top policy challenge. High quality child care can help to meet the challenge in two ways. First, it frees parents to enter the workforce and to focus on work while maintaining a work-life balance. Second, it contributes to children's early learning, setting them on a path of a lifetime of learning and success.
Quality child care is an integral part of the infrastructure that allows Canadians to work. Just like highways and transit systems, you can't get to work without it.
Families are increasingly relying on non-parental care in the early years. According to Statistics Canada, 54% of children age six months to five years are in some form of non-parental child care so that parents can work or study to improve the lives of their families.
We know there's a commitment to capital funding to create 125,000 spaces over five years, and consulting is under way on how to make the child care spaces initiative successful. This commitment acknowledges that families across Canada face a shortage of spaces. However, there need to be measures in place to ensure that these spaces are high quality and that they are sustainable. With this in mind, we'd like to suggest six areas where specific programs could support and encourage this initiative.
Number one is building awareness of quality. Most people agree that quality child care is important, but surprisingly, many are unaware of all the elements of quality. Quality goes beyond price, location, and nutritious food; it includes, among other things, a good child care practitioner, a strong program, and a solid partnership with the parents. To make a good child care choice, parents need information on how to find quality child care. What does it look like? What questions should they ask? What options are there out there for them? This points to the need for tools for parents such as interview questions and guidelines.
Businesses and organizations also need help to understand quality child care. The success of the child care spaces initiative depends on them. This points to the need for tools to help businesses and parent-citizen groups outline the startup and operational steps and the associated costs to create and maintain quality child care spaces.
The second area I'd like to address pertains to national standards for child care. While we have national standards in Canada for everything, from car seats to light bulbs, the level of quality of care varies widely from province to province, as do training requirements for child care practitioners. Those trained in one province may have difficulties having their qualifications accepted in another province. This is in a field already suffering from major recruitment and retention problems.
National standards, created and ratified by the child care field, currently exist. However, they need to be broadly disseminated and used in legislation and training.
Third, I'd like to highlight the child care workforce. It's a major component of quality child care and it's critical to the sustainability of new child care spaces. However, the child care field suffers from problems with retaining and recruiting workers due to poor wages and working conditions and a lack of opportunity for training and professional development. There must be a concerted effort to address these challenges in order to ensure that we have 25,000 new practitioners to staff the promised 125,000 new spaces. This could be achieved, in part, through a national strategy to address HR issues across the country.
Our fourth area of concern deals with fair access to funding under the child care spaces initiative. It's a concern that funding for this initiative will go first to the organizations and groups that are most sophisticated in their fundraising capabilities, rather than where it is most urgently needed across the country and across rural and urban settings.
Some spaces should be reserved for children with special needs. A matching service could be created so that companies and child care organizations and groups can find each other.
The fifth area we'd like to address is federal-provincial collaboration. In order for businesses and organizations to take up the funding, they need assurances that there will be some provincial-territorial matching.
Finally, the sixth and last area we'd like to address is the bigger picture. Debate around child care initiatives in recent years shows that it's an issue that inspires passion. Canadians care deeply about their families, whatever their employment situation. Perhaps it's time to articulate a broad vision of family policy in Canada, with quality child care as a cornerstone, along with extended maternity and parental benefits and employer incentives to adopt family friendly policies. The federal government could lead a national discussion to develop a coordinated national family policy that will support Canada's objectives in terms of securing its place in a competitive world.
I trust I've left you today with ideas for concrete programs that will support quality child care. It's a key component of the social infrastructure that will enable Canadians to build a successful country, a country that values them as citizens and recognizes their contributions as families.
Thank you.