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CUPE members take frontline stories to Parliament Hill in fight for universal child care

Emily Turk | CUPE Communications

CUPE members take frontline stories to Parliament Hill in fight for universal child careFor Lee-Ann Lalli, November 20th, 2018 will always be a day she remembers with pride.

“It was amazing to share my story,” said Lalli, an early childhood educator with CUPE 1936 in Vancouver. “I was able to use my own voice to lobby the government to do a better job in supporting parents, children and child care workers.”

In November, Lalli and the other members of CUPE’s National Child Care Working Group took to Parliament Hill, along with 100 early childhood educators, parents, grandparents, and activists to educate parliamentarians about the need for affordable universal child care and decent wages for child care workers.

The crowd went to the Hill in search of “child care champions”—decisionmakers willing to commit to a publicly funded and managed child care system, and who would support more directed federal spending on child care over the next decade. Currently, Canada spends about 0.3 per cent of GDP on child care, far short of the widely accepted international benchmark of one per cent. 

The lobby day was over a year in the making and was the largest the sector has seen in over a decade. Advocacy group Child Care Now organized the event with support from CUPE National. Activists met with over 60 MPs and senators, including members of every party and several cabinet ministers. Ministers heard first-hand accounts of the child care crisis in Canada from frontline workers and concerned families.

For some of the activists, it was their first experience speaking directly to government. “I was a bit intimidated to go to the parliamentarians’ offices,” says Paule Turgeon, an early childhood educator in Quebec with SCFP 1296. But thanks to a special motivation, Turgeon found her nerve. “The kids I care for are at the centre of everything I do, so I knew I could do it.”

According to lobby day participants, the response to their efforts was mixed. Some politicians were supportive of the issue but waived off the funding requirement, saying that one per cent GDP “is not going to fly.” Others, like NDP Member of Parliament Brigitte Sansoucy, took our members’ message straight to the floor of the House of Commons.

No matter the outcome, the lobby effort helped many find their voice and renewed the hope and enthusiasm of child care advocates across the country—some of whom have been at this for decades.

“I’ve worked as an early childhood educator for over 20 years and have been a child care activist for over 35 years,” says Shellie Bird, member of CUPE 1979. “Being part of this lobby effort was a real honour.”

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