-

Child care operators, educators and parents distance themselves from group of for-profit child care owners’ campaign against $10-a-day child care

TORONTO--(BUSINESS WIRE)--Ontario child care organizations, educators and families are speaking out against a group of for-profit child care owners who are staging rolling closures in the province.

“It’s clear that there is growing backlash in the Ontario child care community against the tactics of this Alberta-backed group of for-profit child care owners this week,” said Carolyn Ferns of the Ontario Coalition for Better Child Care.

Large and small child care operators have written to their families, reassuring them that they have no part in the for-profits’ protest and instead are working hard to make $10-a-day child care a success for families in Ontario. The YMCA of Greater Toronto, Treetop Children’s Centre in Toronto, Milton Community Resource Centre in Peel, Rising Oaks Early Learning in Waterloo Region, and Andrew Fleck Children’s Services in Ottawa are among those who have communicated with families on the issue, making it clear they disagree with both the issues and tactics of for-profit owners.

Meanwhile, the Association of Early Childhood Educators Ontario (AECEO), the professional association representing ECEs across the province, stated that they believe that the best way to ensure ECEs and child care workers have access to decent work and professional pay is for all programs in Ontario to be a part of the $10-a-day system. “System building takes time, it comes with challenges, and we still need big improvements to wages and working conditions in Ontario. But that doesn’t mean that the $10-a-day plan, and its current and potential benefits for educators, should be paused. In fact it should be happening faster than ever,” said AECEO Executive Director Alana Powell.

Meanwhile parents are taking to social media to decry the tactics of for-profit child care owners, which put their child care spaces and fee reductions at risk.

“For-profit operators…call for dismantling CWELCC’s $10-a-day program and funding families directly instead. As a parent, that would be a nightmare. Let’s not let for-profit operators ruin everything we’ve gained under CWELCC. Recent child care fee reductions have been transformative for families.” Toronto mother Brynne Sinclair Waters posted on X.

Treetop Children’s Centre in Toronto wrote to their families last week stating, “At Treetop Children's Centre, we understand the significant impact that rolling closures of childcare centres will have on families in Toronto. To be clear, as a nonprofit childcare centre…we want to let our community know that we will not participate in these closures.”

Andrew Fleck Children’s Services in Ottawa wrote to their families last week, explaining: “For-profit operators say they want unlimited profit – not sure how they can (or how they were) achieving that without compromising quality. But now that the child care sector is supported significantly by taxpayers, having limitations on profit is logical.”

Across Ontario more than 70% of child care spaces are operated on a non-profit basis, where staff and directors are busy preparing to implement the new funding formula and to reduce child care fees to no more than $22 per day in 2025.

mb/cope491

Contacts

For media requests, please contact:
Carolyn Ferns, Policy Coordinator
Ontario Coalition for Better Child Care
carolyn@childcareontario.org
647-218-1275

Ontario Coalition for Better Child Care


Release Versions

Contacts

For media requests, please contact:
Carolyn Ferns, Policy Coordinator
Ontario Coalition for Better Child Care
carolyn@childcareontario.org
647-218-1275

More News From Ontario Coalition for Better Child Care

CUPE condemns MUN closures, Wakeham government for “abandoning” the province

ST. JOHN’S, NL--(BUSINESS WIRE)--The Canadian Union of Public Employees (CUPE) is deeply concerned about the decision by Memorial University Newfoundland (MUN) to address the university’s budget issues by closing campuses and facilities and cutting jobs, and the lack of transparency around the impacts of that decision. While the announcement from MUN says there will be no immediate layoffs associated with this decision, CUPE has been told that positions will be eliminated . "The university need...

Baddeck Long Term Care Workers Vote to Strike

BADDECK, NS--(BUSINESS WIRE)--Alderwood Rest Home workers, represented by Canadian Union of Public Employees (CUPE) 1635, voted 99% in favour of a strike mandate late last week, joining over 30 CUPE long term care locals in calling for improved wages and retention. “I think the fact that thousands of long term care workers have voted to go on strike, something that is hard physically, emotionally, and financially, tells you what the state of long term care is,” said CUPE 1635 President Elsa Rob...

New report warns of longer wait-times, rushed care, and overcrowded Ontario hospitals as government cuts expected to cause over 10,000 job losses and shortfall of 4,080 beds

TORONTO--(BUSINESS WIRE)--As hospitals cut hundreds of jobs and eliminate vacant positions amidst budgetary constraints imposed by the Conservative government, the largest health care union in Ontario is warning about longer wait-times, rushed care, preventable mistakes, and overcrowded hallways. On Tuesday, CUPE released a new research report, “Driven to the brink: projected cuts to intensify Ontario’s hospital crisis,” which contrasts the additional resources required to simply maintain exist...
Back to Newsroom