Press Release
February 01, 2019
Regina — Canada ranks very poorly among peer nations for overall quality measures and rates of access to regulated child care, and Saskatchewan ranks the lowest of all Canadian provinces. A new report from the CCPA-Saskatchewan explores the piecemeal way in which child care policy has been developed by successive governments of all political stripes since 1969, and offers several recommendations for how to improve child care services that are of vital interest to the public.
Saskatchewan’s Failing Report Card on Child Care, by Courtney Carlberg and Jen Budney, reviews the consequences of the province’s historic neglect of child care and asks why successive governments have been so reluctant to invest in affordable, flexible, high-quality care programs for their youngest constituents. The authors demonstrate that while all families struggle under the current child care system, those most negatively affected include families living in rural and remote areas; Indigenous families; single parents; parents doing shift, contract or seasonal work; and low income families generally.
Among the report’s highlights:
The authors conclude by making several policy recommendations for improving child care in Saskatchewan, including appropriate funding, overhauling the current subsidy system, mandatory wages for early childhood educators and early childhood assistants, and moving responsibility for all child care and early learning policies to a single ministry.
-30-
Saskatchewan’s Failing Report Card on Child Care is available on the CCPA website. For more information and interviews contact the authors: Courtney Carlberg (306) 227-8134 and Jen Budney (306) 850-0286.
ILR4