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COVID-19 relief: Province to provide free child care for frontline workers

Municipalities must submit a plan to the province outlining how many child-care spaces are needed to accommodate the children of local frontline workers
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Frontline workers have a lot on their minds right now, without having to worry about who will be watching their children while they’re out providing care.

Finance Minister Rod Phillips passed Ontario's Action Plan: Responding to COVID-19, which is the provincial government’s economic and fiscal update. The plan proposed $17 billion in spending in response to the COVID-19 pandemic.

As part of that package, two measures relate specifically to child care across the province: free child care for frontline workers and a one-time bonus of $200 to $250 per child for parents to help pay for materials to entertain their kids at home.

“This was in response for those frontline workers that have to be out there working ... we had to help those people,” said Associate Minister of Children and Women’s Issues and Simcoe North MPP Jill Dunlop.

When province declared a state of emergency March 17, licensed child-care centres were closed as part of that order.

On March 23, the province released a list of essential services that would remain open, and licensed child-care centres were on that list.

As of Friday, child-care centres provincewide are still closed.

According to Alexandra Adamo, press secretary for Minister of Education Stephen Lecce, each municipality must now submit a plan to the province outlining how many child-care spaces are needed to accommodate the children of local frontline workers, along with which child-care centres would be most advantageous to open based on proximity to where frontline workers are located, such as near hospitals or police stations.

Once the plans are submitted, Adamo said the province will work as quickly as possible to approve the plan and open the spots, which will be 100 per cent funded by the province.

“(The timeline will be determined) on a municipality-by-municipality basis,” said Adamo. “It depends on how fast municipalities get their plans submitted to us for approval. Some municipalities have moved quicker than others. For example, Toronto submitted their plan and it was approved, so their sites are opening on March 30.”

To pay for the care, Adamo said funding will be assessed for each plan, especially with frontline workers not necessarily working a regular Monday to Friday, 9-5.

“Every centre will receive their regular ministry funding,” said Adamo. “If they require more money, we will address that on a case-by-case basis.”

The centres will be required to follow existing health and safety requirements, and will have a plan in place should any staff, parents, or children contract or become exposed to COVID-19.

These protocols must also be approved by the local public health unit and be outlined in the plan submitted to the province. The centres will remain open as long as required.

Also, no child-care site will be allowed to exceed 50 people as per province’s declaration of emergency.

“It won’t be a child-care free-for-all. It will be specific centres,” said Adamo. “Due to heightened protocols for cleaning, it doesn’t make sense to just open all child-care centres.”

As part of the fiscal update, the province also announced a one-time payment of $200 per child up to 12 years of age, and $250 for those with special needs, including children enrolled in private schools to help families pay for the extra costs associated with school and daycare closures during the COVID-19 outbreak.

“It’s for helping to keep children engaged during this time while they’re at home,” said Dunlop. “Educational apps, movies, educational crafts and workbooks... it’s for these types of things they may be using at home during that time.”

“It’s there to help families, especially now that parks are closing down. Anything we can do to help support keeping kids and families at home is important,” she added.

On Wednesday, the provincial government announced and passed their economic and fiscal update which will see $17 billion in spending in response to the COVID-19 pandemic.

The $17 billion is split between three types of support: $3.7 billion for people and jobs, $3.3 billion for health care, and $10 billion to improve cash flow through tax and other deferrals.


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Jessica Owen

About the Author: Jessica Owen

Jessica Owen is an experienced journalist working for Village Media since 2018, primarily covering Collingwood and education.
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