Celebrating the one-year anniversary of the signing of the Canada-wide Early Learning and Child Care Agreement with Nova Scotia

Child care is not just a social policy—it is also an economic policy. Access to high-quality, affordable, flexible and inclusive child care will grow the economy, allow more women to enter the workforce and give every child in Canada the best start in life. That’s why the Government of Canada signed agreements with each province and territory to implement a Canada-wide early learning and child care system.

Today, Minister of Families, Children and Social Development, Karina Gould, joined Nova Scotia’s Minister of Education and Early Childhood Development, Becky Druhan, to celebrate the one-year anniversary of the signing of the Canada-Nova Scotia Canada-wide Early Learning and Child Care Agreement.

As part of the agreement with the Government of Nova Scotia, the Government of Canada is providing $605 million over five years to help improve licensed early learning and child care for children in the province. Through these investments, the governments of Canada and Nova Scotia are working together to improve access to high-quality, affordable, flexible, and inclusive early learning and child care programs and services, with the goal of ensuring that Nova Scotia families have access to licensed child care for an average of $10-a-day by March 31, 2026.

Through the Canada-Nova Scotia Canada-wide agreement, the province has reduced average child care fees for licensed centres that are part of the Canada-Wide and Early Learning Childcare System in Nova Scotia by 25 per cent, retroactive to January 1, 2022, representing a significant step in reaching a 50 per cent reduction in average fees by the end of 2022.

The province has also recently announced that 1,500 new licensed early learning and child care spaces will be created across Nova Scotia by December 31, 2022. These spaces are part of the plan for 9,500 new licensed child care spaces expected to be created across Nova Scotia by March 31, 2026. As work is being done to add child care spaces, Nova Scotia will continue to implement Nova Scotia’s Excellence in Early Childhood Education workforce strategy, which will result in higher wages and more learning opportunities for early childhood educators, resulting in a more professionalized and stable workforce.

In addition, Nova Scotia is supporting:

· the early childhood workforce, through education and professional development opportunities, as well as the development of a wage grid;

· the inclusion of children with disabilities and children needing enhanced or individual supports, with the goal that all licensed early learning and child care programs will offer spaces to meet their needs; enhanced data collection and reporting; and,

· the assurance that First Nations / Indigenous children in Nova Scotia will have access to affordable, high-quality and culturally responsive early learning and child care.

Building a child care system that works for all families in every region of the country is a key part of the plan to make life more affordable for families while creating good jobs and growing the economy. Nearly all of Canada’s provinces and territories, including Nova Scotia, have already seen reductions in child care fees, and, by the end of 2022, average fees for licensed early learning and child care spaces will be cut in half across the country.