British Columbia

B.C. premier pressed on $10-a-day child care promise

B.C. Premier David Eby was pressed this week over whether child-care costs would get to a promise his government said was in reach in 2017 — not an average cost for child care, but a universal one at $10 per day.

Average cost of child care has dropped from around $50 per day to an average of $18 per day, David Eby says

Premier John Horgan, Kennedy Stewart, Mayor of Vancouver, and Katrina Chen, Minister of State for Child Care, along with parents and children at the Creekside Community Centre, celebrate a new partnership that will bring thousands of new licensed child care spaces to parents across the city. Vancouver, Thursday, July 4, 2019. (Maggie MacPherson/CBC)
A child-care worker in Vancouver reads to children in this file photo from 2019, when the B.C. government announced a partnership with the City of Vancouver that would introduce thousands of new licensed child-care spaces across the city. (Maggie MacPherson/CBC)

B.C.'s premier says the average cost of child care has plummeted from what it was when his party took power in 2017 — but it's still not the $10 a day his party promised over two elections.

The average cost of child care has dropped from around $50 per day to an average of $18 per day, according to David Eby.

"Our goal around child care is very straightforward," he said Monday in Victoria from a roundtable with community members over his government's latest budget.

"Every parent should have access to affordable accessible child care ... we have committed to British Columbians to continue to drive down those costs," he said.

A man cranes his head toward a woman speaking while seated at a table together. Another woman sits between them.
B.C. Premier David Eby listens to Anna Phelan, a Victoria parent who has $10-per-day child care, at a budget roundtable event on March 4, while Debbie Banerjee, executive director of Fairfield Gonzales Community Association, listens. (Mike McArthur/CBC News)

Eby was pressed over whether the driving down of those costs would get to a promise his government said was in reach in 2017 — not an average cost for child care, but a universal one at $10 per day.

"We said over a 10-year period we are going to build out an accessible affordable child care program and our target and goal is $10 per day for British Columbians," he said.

The priority to talk about a universal plan with average costs, while eschewing the promised flat rate, illustrates the difficulty the B.C. NDP has had in delivering on one of its key platform planks, opposition politicians and advocates say.

"It is an unmet promise," said B.C. Green Party Leader Sonia Furstenau. "I think families in B.C. anticipated and expected to have $10-per-day daycare."

"We all have constituents that are desperate for child care, affordable child care," said B.C. United finance critic Peter Milobar.

"On top of it, our provincial government has made such a mess of the system that they can't even put money out the door to families that desperately need it."

Milobar is referring to B.C. having to ask Ottawa last month to be allowed to roll forward federal allocations of child-care funding to future years "due to diverse implementation challenges."

A woman in a purple sweater stares ahead.
Sharon Gregson became an advocate for affordable child care in B.C. when she was a single mother of two boys in the mid-1980s. (Chad Pawson/CBC News)

Sharon Gregson with the Coalition of Child Care Advocates said it's a troubling sign that the provincial program is not keeping pace with the money available to grow it.

Gregson, spokesperson for the coalition's $10aDay Child Care campaign, said for the current fiscal plan, federal contributions to child care in B.C. is around $1 billion to the province's $800 million.

"So the investment has grown astronomically but all the funding isn't being spent," she said. "It's being carried over from the federal government at a time when there is such dire need."

The province says since 2018, it has invested $3.9 billion in its 10-year ChildCareBC plan.

Gregson says there is relatively minor growth forecast in B.C.'s own spending over the next two years, which could also hamper the province from meeting a goal of having a wage grid to help with the recruitment and retention of child-care workers needed to operate new child-care spots.

"We need to invest in the workforce, which Premier Eby has pointed to the challenges of," she said.

Currently there are 140,000 licensed child-care spots in B.C., according to Gregson, with 14,000 of them, or 10 per cent, operating at $10 per day.

"This isn't going to happen overnight," Eby said about adding spots. 

"This is building the first new major social program in a generation in British Columbia … we've got more to do."

He also called on Ottawa this week to continue being a "strong" partner to help continue to build B.C.'s affordable child-care program.

ABOUT THE AUTHOR

Chad Pawson is a CBC News reporter in Vancouver. Please contact him at [email protected].