I'm also here to represent the Canadian Child Care Management Association.
I want to address a few items that came up in the discussion earlier this afternoon. Of course I couldn't write fast enough to have my comments here.
This bill makes the premise that there is a need for spaces, yet this bill is determined to block expansion in a ready, able, and willing private sector. Home day care operators are self-employed. They don't give receipts and they don't pay taxes, yet this bill is prepared to give them a green light to expand. Even if home day care met regulations and tax laws, this bill is prepared to accept self-employed untrained people to share in the delivery of child care, but not a licensed professional child care centre that is privately owned.
Ms. Savoie stated that the bill did not make a judgment on parental choice, yet this bill is fully prepared to take away one of those choices.
It should be noted that in Canada, generally speaking, it is not the centre that is funded; it is the parent who receives a subsidy to purchase a service. Quite often I've noticed that people say it's the centre that is funded. We really need to make sure we understand what we're stating here.
When the child care service providers learned that child care had moved forward on the Liberal budget agenda, many felt elated with the thoughts that much-needed funding would help stabilize an industry that had been crippled by years of neglect and band-aid solutions, at every level of government. This elation quickly ended with the realization that a movement was being heavily funded to steer all the funding towards a monopoly, towards a public delivery system.
One has to wonder why the push is so heavy-handed. What is the real goal of those who push parents away from their choices of whether to stay at home, or have their child cared for by a relative, neighbour, or a regulated home or licensed centre?
To address this issue, over 200 service providers from across Canada met on December 18, 2004, for discussions and the resulting reinstatement of the Canadian Child Care Management Association. The Association of Day Care Operators of Ontario feels that you can be proud, as we are, to endorse and promote the adopted principles.
Both CCCMA and ADCO members work directly in the delivery of child care programs. Together, private and non-profit agencies, and centre-based and home child care agencies, embrace the quality of diversity. We believe parental choice is essential. Parents' rights to choose from an array of programs or to stay at home must be supported by all levels of government.
The core principles agreed to by the participants rest on the underlying understanding that all regulated and licensed child care centres and programs in Canada--private and non-profit--have a role in Canada's national early learning and child care system. They should be treated equally. We all want a level playing field, fair competition, and parental choice.
Representatives, who met, from child care organizations from British Columbia, Alberta, Ontario, Quebec, Nova Scotia, P.E.I., and Newfoundland and Labrador are about inclusion, not exclusion. A number of points were ratified by the members. I won't go into all of those. This detail will be in your documents that I distributed to you.
We also wanted to talk a bit about the private sector. As we know, it brings capital investment and creates partnerships with businesses in creating spaces.
We have a personal stake in the child care facilities. They tend to bring hands-on management and cost-effectiveness. We want enforcement of higher standards and we want healthy competition among services. This means our children and their parents have the choice of excellence.
Parental subsidies should follow the parent, thereby sending clear messages as to satisfaction and quality assurances. Entrepreneurs bring many areas of expertise. We have the ability and we are motivated to work with the non-profit sector and government, at all levels.
I would also remind our committee that women represent 96% of the child care workforce. Child care is a key sector, which provides opportunities and development for female entrepreneurs.
Ironically, everything that private and non-profit operators bring to our great land.... A few individuals and researchers have been able to sidetrack you with topics that are destructive and costly. These funded groups have focused on ownership and trade issues, nothing else. Unlike all the other organizations represented by the CCCMA, our memberships are voluntary and our collective work is to raise the standards of care, professionalism, and the standards of our work environments. Our ambition is to see parents' rights upheld and to deliver a high-quality program when they need us.
Nowhere else in the world is a debate on ownership so prevalent. Nor is there anywhere else where the concept of “big box” day care is used as a scare tactic. Canada’s child care discussion is often fraught with the notion that a coined phrase of “big box” day care will creep into our landscape should private operators be allowed to operate, and that the United States would jeopardize our system. Nothing could be further from the truth.
I've enclosed in your documentation a memorandum from the well-respected trade lawyer Larry Herman, of Cassels Brock, on child care and the trade agreement. His memorandum speaks for itself. In his opening remarks he states:
It is simplistic to claim that a system of private delivery of health care and/or child care services in Canada can be attacked under trade agreements as requiring the system to be opened up to any foreign, (i.e., U.S.) service providers. The spectre of a trade despite under the NAFTA or the WTO is often used to exploit concerns over the ability of Canada or the Canadian provinces to legislate for the public good.
Big box day care is a scare tactic, nothing more. We currently have over 50% of B.C.’s child care in the private licensed sector: Newfoundland is at 85%, Alberta is at 75%, and all Atlantic provinces are treating all centres equally. Even with Quebec’s $7-per-day day care, not one big box day care has stepped foot in Canada.
From annual reports of the Child Care Information Exchange in the U.S., the largest private and non-profit operators in the U.S. have very limited interest in child care in Canada. Over the last few years that I've been following these reports, no one has made any direction this way. All continue to operate in the U.S., and those that have moved outside the U.S. have done so by the invitation of the countries.