Thank you.
I'm the executive director of the Child Care Advocacy Association of Canada, and with me today is Nancy Peckford, from the Feminist Alliance for International Action, a member organization of our council of advocates. Thank you for inviting us to appear before you today.
I'll briefly remind you of some of the key points we have already raised through our submission to Advantage Canada and to this committee.
This budget represents a loss to communities, to families, and to children. Almost $1 billion in committed child care funding is being taken away. It's a cut of $27 million to the children of Saskatchewan alone. As we stated in our Advantage Canada submission, we offer the following points outlining how child care relates to building a strong, sustainable, modern economy, and why a focused investment strategy is necessary.
Child care helps develop a talented, creative workforce for the future. Child care provides children with the foundations for lifelong health, learning, and skill development. Good child care is good for children.
Child care also supports labour force development and opportunities now. The CCAC wishes to highlight the inherent contradiction between the federal government's workforce participation goals and its lack of commitment to early learning and child care services.
Child care supports employability for all, immediately and on an ongoing basis. When Canadian families do not have access to quality child care, our labour force and our employability suffer. With women now the majority in virtually all university programs, decreased labour force attachment among mothers exacerbates skilled worker shortages.
To build the child care system that Canadians want and need, the CCAC therefore calls on the federal government to adopt the following focused investment strategy.
First, restore and increase sustained, long-term federal funding to the provinces and territories. Federal transfers must be specifically dedicated to improving and expanding child care services based on provincial and territorial commitments to advance quality, inclusion, and affordability.
Second, enact federal child care legislation, Bill C-303, which recognizes the principles of a pan-Canadian child care system, makes the federal government accountable to Parliament with respect to child care funding and policy, and respects Quebec and first nations rights to establish their own child care systems.
Third, redirect the capital incentives for child care spaces with dedicated capital transfers to the provinces and territories to be used to build child care services that communities prioritize, own, deliver, and account for.
Fourth, provide effective income supports for Canadian families by incorporating the current taxable family allowance into the Canada child tax benefit.
As you may know, the CCAC is the voice for parents, four million strong. I'll close my remarks with this statement by a parent, Dale Summers, from Brampton. Dale says:
Daycare is chronically underfunded, to the point as parents our child has 'dance-a-thons' (she is 16 months old), has to sell chocolate (pay up front) and we are forced to buy exorbitant priced pictures and movies (not allowed to record our own) to aid in the running of the daycare on top of the $1,000 a month we pay. The $100 from the government is an insult. You want to know why Canada’s birth rate is in decline? Try the cost of daycare to start. Who can afford two or three children anymore?
Thank you. Nancy and I will both be happy to answer questions.