| 2004 |
| February |
The
Coalition responds with harsh disappointment
to the Provincial Budget highlighting that
over the last three years, a total of $843
million has been cut from the three Ministries
with responsibilities for child care, children,
women, and families – the Ministry
of Community Aboriginal and Women’s
Services (MCAWS), the Ministry of Human
Resources, and the Ministry of Children
and Family Development.
The Federal Throne Speech promises to accelerate
initiatives under the existing Multilateral
Framework for Early Learning and Child Care
for more quality child care more quickly.
The
Advocacy Forum responds with an analysis
showing that in spite of having received
$90 million from the federal government
over two years, BC has spent $18 million
less on child care!
BC
Parent Voices encourages parents to
write and tell the new minister responsible
for child care that BC CAN afford to give
children the best start. Parents call on
the government to be a champion for children,
women and quality child care in BC –
to reverse the cuts and start rebuilding
a publicly funded, high quality child care
system |
| January |
The Coalition of
Child Care Advocates holds a successful
AGM with over 100 attendees. Key note speaker
Carole James, leader of the BC New Democratic
Party, speaks about child care, and four
of the Coalition Regional Activists inform
the crowd about what is happening with child
care in communities across the province.
The
Coalition submits a brief to the Federal
Finance Minister’s 2004 Pre Budget
Consultation reiterating the recommendations
it made to the Federal Finance Committee
in October, 2003.
BC
Parent Voices submits a pre budget consultation
brief to the newly appointed federal
finance minister. |
| 2003 |
| December |
In anticipation of the next federal and
provincial elections, the Child Care Advocacy
Forum calls on organizations, businesses &
sole proprietors, municipal and regional councils,
school boards, group and family child care
programs, labour unions, band councils and
other groups to endorse its updated Common
Vision and Agenda. |
| November |
The Coalition of
Child Care Advocates supports the Vancouver
School Board (VSB) motion urging the provincial
government to rescind laws imposing income-assistance
time limits and reducing benefits, and to
restore the board's inner-city funding.
The
Coalition of Child Care Advocates and the
BC Government and Services Employees’
Union co-sponsor an historic event that
brings child care and labour activists together
to develop joint strategies for building
a publicly funded child care system.
Child Care advocates across BC raise the
importance of child care during the NDP
Leadership campaign and at the Leadership
convention. |
| October |
The
Coalition of Child Care Advocates and other
advocates present at the BC Select Standing
Committee on Finance. Advocates send
a strong message to the provincial government
that child care funding must be restored
to 2001/02 levels, that BC must have a 5
year plan for child care and that federal
dollars must be spent to complement, not
replace, provincial spending.
The Coalition of Child Care Advocates of
BC and the Child Care Advocacy Association
of Canada distribute information at the
national conference of the Canadian Association
for Community Living and BC Association
for Community Living and participate in
a panel on "Inclusive Child Care -
Creating a Local-to-National Strategy".
BC
Parent Voices submits a written brief,
endorsed by over 400 individuals from 24
communities across BC, and urges the provincial
government to make spending on licensed
quality care a provincial budget priority. |
| September |
The
Coalition of Child Care Advocates presents
to the federal Standing Committee on Finance,
recommending that the federal government
commit 1% of Gross Domestic Product (GDP)
to a publicly funded regulated child care
system, as recommended by the European Union,
and require that provinces/territories use
the funds specifically for publicly-funded,
regulated, high quality, not-for-profit,
accessible and affordable child care services.
The
Coalition of Child Care Advocates releases
a strong critique of the provincial
government’s plan to ‘refocus’
the Supported Child Care program away from
child care. Community organizations respond
positively to the Coalition’s analysis.
BC
Parent Vocies submits a written brief to
the House of Commons Standing Committee
on Finance. Over 200 individuals and
organizations from 32 BC communities endorse
the brief. |
| August |
The Child Care Advocacy
Forum releases “They
Can Afford It”, demonstrating
that the provincial government can indeed
afford to reverse the cuts to child care.
The Coalition of Child Care Advocates of
BC sends a letter
of solidarity, in both official languages,
to Quebec advocates as they fight to retain
their publicly funded child care system. |
| July |
The Coalition formalizes
its relationships with members across the
province by launching a Regional Activists
Network.
Child care advocates speak to Vancouver
City Council in support of additional city
funding for inner-city child care programs
that are facing closure due to provincial
funding cuts. |
| June |
The Child Care Advocacy
Forum releases “Anything
But Child Care”, explaining how
BC claims to support early childhood development
but ignores that child care is a cornerstone
of Early Childhood Development.
The Child Care Advocacy Forum releases
“Publicly
Funded Child Care – What Does it Mean?”,
a popularized explanation of the need to
move child care from a user fee arrangement
to a publicly funded system. |
| May |
The
Coalition and other advocates adopt a “Nothing
To Celebrate” Campaign for Child Care
Month highlighting that BC has made
or plans to make cuts of over $50 million
to child care.
BC Parent Voices launches its province-wide
handprint campaign and highlights the impact
of cuts on families with this year’s
“Nothing to Celebrate” theme
during child care month.
We held another successful "Student
Advocacy Forum" in May which brought
together over 100 students currently enroled
in early childhood education programs. As
a result of this initiative, the Coalition
has received requests from Early Childhood
Education Training Programs in other provinces
about our work in supporting student advocacy
skills. |
| April |
The provincial government
introduces a new Child Care Operating Funding
(CCOF) Program with an overall budget that
is $14.6 million less than the province spent
on licensed care in 2001. CCOF is based on
enrolment so programs that are full, because
they serve more affluent communities, receive
more funds than those who have vacancies because
parents can’t afford full fees. |
| March |
The federal government,
9 provinces and 3 territories sign the Multilateral
Framework on Early Childhood Learning and
Child Care which provides $900 million
over 5 years to provinces and territories
for regulated child care that meets quality
standards established and monitored by provincial/
territorial governments and $35 million for
aboriginal child care. Advocates renew calls
for more federal funding and for accountability
measures that require provinces to use the
funds to supplement, not replace provincial
funding. |
| February |
The Child Care Advocacy Forum
releases the results of its Caregiver Survey
- "Where
are the children?" - based
on responses from over 700 caregivers across
BC, the report paints a troubling picture
of the damage done by provincial cuts.
The federal budget includes additional
funds for ‘regulated child care’
while BC’s provincial budget continues
to cut and dismantle regulated child care.
Advocates call on the province to restore
child care funding levels and to provide
adequate funding for a 5 year plan that
entitles all children access to quality
regulated child care. They call on the federal
government to ensure that dedicated federal
funds for quality regulated child care are
not used to replace provincial cuts.
BC
Parent Voices expands its Diaper Campaign
province wide and parents from across BC
send clean diapers and a message to the
Premier, Finance Minister, and MLAs which
feature the impact of the funding cuts to
their child care programs and children. |
| January |
A poll conducted by the Child Care Advocacy
Association of Canada and the Canadian Child
Care Federation shows that 90% of Canadians
support a national child care plan and 88%
want a publicly funded system.
The Coalition holds a very successful
AGM - with Christine McLean, the Chair of
the Child Care Advocacy Association of Canada,
as the key note speaker.
Parents from
child care programs in Burnaby rally to
save their centres. They initiate a 'Diaper
Campaign' and hold a successful rally.
The Coalition calls on advocates
to send a Communiqué
to Collins, the provincial Finance Minister,
calling on him to make child care a priority
in the upcoming provincial budget. |
| 2002 |
| December |
The Child Care Advocacy Association
of Canada calls on advocates to send a Memo
to John Manley, the federal Finance Minister,
calling on him to make child care a priority
in the upcoming federal budget. |
| November |
The
Ministry of Community, Aboriginal and Women's
Services (MCAWS) announces reduced funding
for new child care operating grant to replace
Munroe, CCP, and FAP. Advocates across the
province speak out against the funding formula
saying that it will lead to a two-tiered
system. Many centres look at closing their
doors due to reduced funding.
Federal Liberal MP's release a report calling
for a National Child Care Strategy which
outlines principles and objectives, mechanisms
(the architecture) for working with provinces
and territories and a recommendation of
a federal commitment of $10.9 billion over
4 years.
The Coalition calls on child care advocates
to "Vote Child Care" in Municipal
and School Board elections.
BC Women's Centres speak out against cuts
to child care. |
| October |
The
federal speech from the throne renews Ottawa's
commitment to "work with its partners
to increase access to...quality child care".
Advocates respond with cautious optimism.
Advocates participate in the federal government's
review of the Social Union Framework Agreement
(SUFA), highlighting the failure of the
Agreement on Early Childhood Development
to address child care needs and calling
on the federal government to make a substantial
investment and commit to a 5 year action
plan to develop a comprehensive child care
system.
The Child Care Advocacy Forum undertakes
a survey of caregivers across BC to assess
the impact of changes in government policies
and cuts to funding. |
| August |
The
Coalition sponsors a two day strategy session
with advocates from across the province.
The Session concludes that the child care
advocacy movement needs to use a wide range
of diverse tactics. Participants reaffirm
the Coalition's leadership role in holding
onto a long-term vision and in holding up
the advocacy - activism- resistance end
of the strategic continuum.
The Ministry of Health announces a review
of licensing regulations effecting child
care facilities and the Child Care Advocacy
Forum encourages advocates to send a clear
message that standards protecting quality
child care must be maintained and strengthened. |
| June |
The
provincial government terminates the highly
successful Funding Assistance Program (FAP)
for school-aged care and replaces it with
a 'Transition Grant' that cuts funds by
about 50% and removes the requirement that
programs receiving the grant cap parent
fees at $7 a day.
The Child Care Advocacy Forum responds
to the impact of school closures and changes
to school calendars on school-aged child
care programs and on other child care programs
located in or on school property. |
| May |
During
Child Care Month, advocates add their voice
to the thousands of others demanding that
cuts to services must be halted in a huge
rally in downtown Vancouver.
The Child Care Advocacy Forum asks families
to tell government what the cuts to child
care subsidy mean for them and thousands
respond. |
| April |
The Ministry
of Human Resources implements cuts to the
child care subsidy program which, in the next
3 months, negatively affect 10,500 BC families. |
| March |
Child
care advocates join thousands of others
concerned with social justice to march through
downtown Victoria to call on the provincial
government to stop the cuts to health, education
and social programs.
The Child Care Advocacy Forum reaffirms
its commitment to work together to advance
our Common Vision and Agenda for Child Care
Services in BC.
The Coalition sends an open letter to Premier
Campbell expressing shock and anger over
the cross-ministerial assault on child care. |
| February |
The
provincial budget and three year Service
Plans for provincial Ministry are released.
- Eligibility for the child care subsidy
program will be reduced.
- Child Care Resource and Referral Programs,
One Stop Access sites and the provincial
services of Westcoast Child Care Resource
Centre will lose their provincial funding
on April 1, 2004.
- Existing child care grants will be combined
into one operating grant in 2003/04.
|
| 2001 |
| August |
The
new Liberal Government repeals the four
year implementation plan in the Child
Care BC Act.
The Minister responsible for child care
announces a limited consultation process
to guide the development of a sustainable
child care plan |
| May |
The
Liberal Party wins a large majority in the
provincial election.
Their child care election platform calls
for "targeting funds to parents who
need it most and increasing child care choices
by encouraging the expansion of safe, affordable
child care spaces "
Child care not in Ministry of Early Childhood
Development as expected but rather put in
with Ministry of Community, Aboriginal and
Women's Services |
| March |
The Child
Care BC Act is proclaimed. It includes
a four year plan to extend public funding
to family child care, group child care for
infants/ toddlers and 3 - 5 year olds and
pre-schools. BC is now the second jurisdiction
in North America with a publicly funded child
care system. |
| January |
The School
Aged Program begins and makes over 15,000
school aged child care spaces available at
a maximum fee of $7 a day for before and after
school care and $14 a day for full day care
and kindercare. Parent fees are reduced by
an average of $100 a month |
| 2000 |
| September |
Premier
Dosanjh announces the inclusion of kindergarten
children in the school-age funding plan |
| March |
All candidates, led by Corky Evans, in the
NDP leadership race make a commitment to
move on child care.
The Provincial
throne speech includes a commitment to begin
building, with parents and care providers,
a publicly funded child care system.
The Provincial
budget commits $14 million for before and
after school child care funding for 2000-01
(annualized to $30 million) which is $7
per day for parents. Advocates applaud this
as an important first step. |
| 1999 |
| October |
Moe Sihota
releases a discussion paper called "Building
a Better Future for BC's Kids" which
received an unheard of 10,000 responses of
which 90% call for provincial and federal
governments to make a commitment to a publicly
funded child care system. Advocates worked
hard. |
| July |
Vancouver
Board of Trade releases a paper on child care
which recommends "that public policy
make investment in early childhood development
for children aged 0-6 a spending priority" |
| May-June |
Community social services
strike included child care workers.
The group Parents For Child Care
formed. |
| March |
The Child
Care Advocacy Forum is formed; the
six provincial organizations came together
to speak with a common voice |
| 1990s |
| |
Child care
included in community social services sector |
| 1960s
- 80s |
| |
Grassroots
advocacy and six provincial child care organizations
formed |