Good morning, committee chair and members.
Bonjour tout le monde.
I'm the B.C. vice-president of the Public Service Alliance of Canada. The PSAC represents most workers in federal government departments, agencies, and crown corporations. There are approximately 165,000 PSAC members across Canada, 15,000 of which are in B.C.
I'm going to speak about the importance of a national child care program. The PSAC doesn't represent child care workers, but we think child care should be one of the top priorities of the federal government. Mainly, I'm going to read from my exciting presentation.
A significant federal commitment to develop a national child care system similar to the one currently in operation in Quebec, a universal non-profit child care system available to all children whether their mothers are employed outside the home or work full time in the home, will provide immediate economic benefits and will assist in Canada's recovery from the current economic slowdown.
Beyond the jobs that can immediately be created by employment in child care facilities, child care provides support to parents across the labour force. Many families are now facing tenuous employment, layoffs, or difficult transitions to new jobs and the associated challenge to their financial resources. Accessible and affordable child care services are critical for parents to maintain their labour force attachment and/or obtain necessary skill development to deal with employment transitions.
The early learning and child care sector is labour-intensive and involves local expenditures, so spending in this sector has a high multiplier effect. Canadian research calculates that every dollar of child care spending produces a ripple effect of $1.58 in the local economy. Many U.S. studies have produced similar figures.
In terms of long-term gain, investing in the early years is, first and foremost, about investing in children's physical, social, emotional, and intellectual well-being, ensuring that Canada is competitive with other modern economies now and in the future.
Child care yields high economic and social returns. Depending upon how and where the research is done, studies show returns from $2 to $17 for every dollar spent. These returns are derived from improved school performance, reduced need for remediation in the school years, and reduction of anti-social behaviour, all resulting in mothers' labour force participation and adult productivity later.
Child care helps keep families, and women in particular, out of poverty. With access to good child care, female lone parents, most of whom are unable to pay child care user fees, are better able to seek further education, train for work, get decent jobs, and accept promotions. Two-parent families also have a chance to improve economic stability and income, particularly in times of insecure employment and stagnating wages.
In Quebec, where universal child care is available to all families, there has been a 50% drop in the rate of children living in poverty, in stark contrast to the rest of Canada, where, despite an all-party resolution in the House of Commons--in 1989, I believe--to eliminate child poverty by 2000, the national child poverty rate remains at about 10%, which is a disgrace in a wealthy country like Canada.
Child care supports women's workforce participation, education, and training. Child care is a key support for women already in the workforce and for those who want to enter it. Since Quebec's child care reform began, twice the number of married women entered the workforce than did so in the rest of Canada, providing Quebec with a substantial return in income and payroll taxes.
Child care builds local economies, since we know that a lot of these child care dollars go directly to the economy. Child care would also help us address the diminishing labour force. We've seen that in Quebec with their child care program, which is very affordable and universal and has resulted in more women being able to enter the workforce. Also, the Quebec birth rate has increased.
In terms of what we're asking for, we would ask that the federal budget include new federal transfer payments to provinces and territories specifically to provide access to quality affordable child care services based on the Quebec model, and that these payments also be made conditional, with measurable targets, to ensure that there is a system of quality, affordable, inclusive, and universal child care services in the provinces and territories.
The cost of a national child care program will be offset by reduced expenditures on unemployment benefits, poverty reduction programs, health care, education, and policing costs.
The current system....
Is my time up?