Image: Flickr/bcgovphotos

After the overstuffed turkey dinners, eggnog and latkes, the holidays are a perfect time to reflect on the past year before gearing up for the new one. This year, with a federal election looming and ChildCare 2020, Canada’s first child care policy conference in ten years just behind us, the holiday was an opportunity for heavy-duty musings about child care in 2015. 

Canadians are hyper-aware that the next federal election is imminent with October 19 the fixed date and a spring election evermore improbable as the economy slips and slides. Whenever it is, child care will be an ardently debated election issue, likely to be influenced by the considerable food-for-thought coming from ChildCare 2020.

ChildCare 2020’s goal was gaining consensus on a national vision for a universal, quality child care system and strategizing to make it a reality. Its tone was set by several amazing speakers-the ever-inspiring Stephan Lewis, Quebec economist Pierre Fortin, Scotland’s Bronwen Cohen and Flemish scholar Michel Vandenbroeck who reflected on big ideas-that child care is a human right, about integrating care and education, about the pitfalls of relying on the market for child care, and about child care’s tangible benefits to the economy-all backed by the solid knowledge that’s become available in the last decade.

Former Social Development Minister Ken Dryden delivered a unique, “birds-eye” view reinforcing how much big thinking about child care has evolved in Canada. In 2004, Mr. Dryden was tasked with implementing the Liberals’ promised national child care program only to have it abruptly undone by the Conservatives who replaced them in 2006. At ChildCare 2020, he observed that a key question that should be asked is “how does the vision turn into execution? What’s the plan?” and that a good slogan would have been “From vision to implementing the vision” (not “from vision to action”).

Perhaps most significantly, though, he remarked on how much child-care advocacy had “matured” since his time.

Looking back, it’s evident how true this is. Twenty-five years ago, child-care movement players weren’t thinking about how to blend care and education, the relationship between child care and inequality or about how Canada’s child-care market model fails to deliver. Economists like Pierre Fortin hadn’t demonstrated the tangible benefits of universal child care to the economy using concrete data.

Most important, we were less clear about why adding on bits and pieces-a training strategy here, a regulation change there, money to “create spaces”-is the wrong way to go if the goal is high quality universal early childhood education and care (ECEC) services that Canadian families want and need.

That is, we hadn’t become clear about why and how building a child care system is paramount-fundamental to real change.

Looking back at key past child care election initiatives shows how much child care-thinking has evolved. In the 1993 federal election, the Liberals’ “Red Book” promised to “create up to 150,000 spaces”. It just touched on affordability, mentioning three-way cost-sharing: 40 per cent federal, 40 per cent provincial and 20 per cent parental fees. It mentioned “quality” but only as an adjective-none of the hard stuff about the ECE workforce’s low pay or poor working conditions and recognition. And it made no mention of today’s front-and-centre ECEC issues-blending care and education, public management and the folly of relying on a child-care market. There were no principles, no policy framework and no building blocks for a high quality accessible ECEC system. At the time, it was mostly about spaces, spaces, spaces. (This election promise was unceremoniously abandoned after the Liberals won the 1993 election).

Fast forward to another federal election. The Liberals had been in power since 1993 but in 2004 new leader Paul Martin put forward the Foundations proposal for a national child care program. Citing Europe’s better developed ECEC systems and positioning child care both as learning and care, it specified four “QUAD” principles – Quality, Universality, Accessibility and Developmental and a five year funding commitment. Provinces/territories “to receive funding under the new Foundations program” were to develop “action plans” and “will be invited to pass legislation implementing the QUAD principles”.

The Foundations proposal was significantly more developed than the spaces, spaces, spaces approach. It put forward the idea that provincial/territorial programs would need to meet the national “QUAD” principles as well as the dual care/education roles of quality child care, although it didn’t tackle quality or governance issues, which the child care movement advocated to address up front.

Although all provinces/territories agreed to it, Foundations too wound up on the crowded shelf of unfinished national child care initiatives with the 2006 Conservative election victory.

Flash forward to late 2014 and the consensus at ChildCare 2020. A focus of much of the discussion at the conference was about why Canada needs a real child care system, not more of the same one-off measures. The background “vision” paper set out three principles for a national ECEC system — Quality, Accessibility (including affordability) and Comprehensiveness and three “System Components” needed to make the principles a reality: A National Policy Framework, beginning with the premise that child care is a public good, not a commodity; A Long-Term Sustained Funding Plan; and Shared Work on System Development such as data, research and a national quality framework.

At the conference’s end, Toronto City Councillor Janet Davis called on conference participants to endorse the vision paper. They did-unanimously, embracing the conference’s system-thinking. Many vowed to take their support for this approach back to their own communities.

So — are we there yet? Canadian child-care advocacy and policy-thinking has “matured” considerably. We expect to be hearing a lot about child care in 2015. The New Democrats have released their platform and the Conservative government has more-or-less released theirs with the “Family Tax Cut”. But the debate is yet to come. It seems hopeful that it will be a more mature, 2015-type child care discussion: public management and markets, integration, systems and patchwork, system-building and spaces, public goods and commodification. There seems to be good recognition that -as the labour movement’s Rethink Childcare campaign has been explaining- “child care shouldn’t be a matter of luck” or a commodity but a human right.

Next year between Christmas and New Years, after the turkey, eggnog and latkes, we should be looking back at a very interesting year for child care, and for Canada. Hopefully, it will have been a time of opportunity.

Monica Lysack is an early childhood education professor at Sheridan College.

 

Martha Friendly

Martha Friendly

Martha is the founder and Executive Director of the Childcare Resource and Research Unit. She has authored numerous articles, chapters and reports on child care and a book on child care policy, and...