Hundreds of thousands families live in daycare ‘deserts,’ report says
OTTAWA — An estimated 776,000 young Canadian children live in areas of the country parched of available daycare spaces, suggests a new report that outlines the statistical flip side of high child care costs in some parts of the country.
The study by the Canadian Centre for Policy Alternatives, being released Thursday, says 44 per cent of all non-school-age children — under the age of 5 — live in so-called “child care deserts” where the number of children outstrips the available spaces in licensed homes and centres.
The study didn’t take into account unlicensed daycare because there is no exhaustive list of spaces Canada-wide.
Researchers found cities in provinces that take a more active role in regulating child care were more likely to have broader coverage, compared with those provinces that took a hands-off approach to regulation and let the market dictate prices and locations of spaces.