100 days of devolved Government in Northern Ireland – what has it delivered for childcare?
Employers For Childcare
Charity & social enterprise supporting parents, employers & childcare providers. Includes High Rise adventure centre.
Childcare was identified as a priority for the new Northern Ireland Executive but what has been achieved?
As a charity which has spent the past 20 years campaigning for childcare to be recognised as an economic – as well as an educational and societal - issue, it was hugely encouraging that childcare emerged very quickly as a key priority for the new Northern Ireland Executive. On the day new Ministers were appointed, they all stood up in the Assembly highlighting the critical role of childcare in supporting children, families, our childcare sector and its workforce, and our economy and society as a whole.
Now 100 days on since devolved government returned to Northern Ireland for the first time in two years, what has actually been delivered to improve the childcare situation in Northern Ireland, for parents who are struggling to afford the childcare they need, and for childcare providers struggling to keep their doors open?
Here’s an outline of some of the numbers:
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Long-term strategy and interim support promised
Speaking in the Assembly in February, Education Minister Paul Givan said: “I assure the House that the development of an early learning and childcare strategy is a top priority for me as Education Minister”. He recognised that there was a need for “urgent actions” to support both parents and struggling childcare settings.?
Commitments were given that there would be interim support made available to stabilise the childcare sector, and to help parents.
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Warm words but no actions
Yet 100 days on, the childcare crisis continues. Our Family Benefits Advice Service hears daily from parents who are clinging on to their jobs, struggling to afford their monthly childcare bills or getting into debt in order to pay them, while they wait for the support that has been promised, but not yet delivered. We hear too from childcare providers who just cannot understand why their hopes and expectations have been raised, yet nothing has yet been delivered by way of tangible support to help them stay in business, or to support the parents who use their services.
This is simply not good enough. 100 days on and there is growing concern that the optimism that things would be different under this mandate will be shown to be unfounded. For parents and for childcare providers, the excitement that childcare had finally been recognised as a key issue that underpins everything else the Executive seeks to achieve has faded quickly as immediate concerns about whether they can stay in work, or pay their staff, have taken over.
Again, we are asking Ministers to deliver on two things:
1.????? The promised ‘interim support’ to address the current childcare crisis – helping parents to afford the childcare they need, and supporting our childcare providers to deliver high quality childcare sustainably.
2.????? A timeline for the delivery of an ambitious Early Learning and Childcare Strategy that includes a bespoke funding model for Northern Ireland, learning from experiences elsewhere.
It is positive that MLAs from across all parties are keeping childcare high on the agenda in the Assembly through written and urgent questions, Assembly Committees and the All Party Group on Early Education and Childcare. And we understand that officials from across Government Departments are working on plans both for in-year actions and on the longer term Early Learning and Childcare Strategy,
But if childcare is really to be the ‘legacy’ of this government, as has been indicated time and again, we need to see action now that goes beyond warm words and promises to deliver meaningful change.
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Director of Timely Careers | Founder & Director, Little Women NI l NI 40 under 40 | Chartered Manager
10 个月Thanks for continuing to champion and lobby for this, Aoife. Exhausting that this is where we are at 20 years on and completely demoralising for working/want to be working parents and childcare providers. Very much looking forward to hearing any form of update on this from the Executive.
Policy & Public Affairs Strategist | Founder, Policy360 | Partnership Expert 25+ yrs shaping policy, influencing change & building partnerships. Helping orgs craft strategies that get policymakers to listen & act.
10 个月Aoife Hamilton a quote from my favourite film is all I can share ‘By all means move at a glacial pace. You know how that thrills me.’