MONCTON (GNB)The provincial government announced today that families with children aged five and under attending a designated New Brunswick Early Learning Centre will not pay more than 20 per cent of their income for child care.

“Your government is focused on growing the economy in a way that all New Brunswickers move forward together,” said Premier Brian Gallant. “With our multi-year economic growth plan, we are investing to ensure families can afford and access higher-quality child care. These investments will help grow our economy and strengthen middle class families.”

 

These subsidies will be available for families with annual gross incomes of over $37,500 on a sliding scale and will help make quality child care more affordable and accessible for even more New Brunswick families.

 

The provincial government has already announced free child care for families with an annual gross income under $37,500 who have children aged five and under attending a designated New Brunswick Early Learning Centre. Examples of how this will work are available online.

 

This financial support means that a family with one infant and one preschooler attending an early learning centre with a gross family income of $40,000 would receive a subsidy of $15,745 per year, while a family with one infant and two preschoolers with a gross family income of $80,000 would receive a subsidy of $11,300 per year. This is based on a daily fee of $39/day per infant space and $33/day per preschool space.

 

Financial support for the middle class and the free daycare program is for parents who are either working or attending school, with children aged five and under attending a designated New Brunswick Early Learning Centre.

The average New Brunswick household’s gross annual income is $75,700. It is expected that a significant number of New Brunswick families will benefit from this additional financial support, said Gallant. About 71 percent of New Brunswick families have household incomes of less than $80,000.

 

The province is committing to invest $31 million to enhance the Daycare Assistance Program with the following components:

 

Families can also now access a subsidy calculator that will provide them with an estimate of the amount of child care financial support available to them.

 

“The Government of Canada believes that early learning and child care services should be affordable for all families,” said federal Health Minister Ginette Petitpas Taylor. “I am pleased that New Brunswick’s action plan is implementing mechanisms to assist parents in meeting the rising costs of raising a family.”

 

Petitpas Taylor spoke on behalf of federal Families, Children and Social Development Minister Jean-Yves Duclos.

 

All of these financial supports will be available to eligible families across the province. The first designated anglophone and francophone centres will be located in Saint John and the Greater Edmundston area beginning in March. They will be implemented provincewide by March 1, 2019. Parents will be notified by their daycares once they are designated and can begin the process.

 

This daycare program is another way the government is helping working parents and parents attending university or college with child care costs.

 

Existing programs to help students continue their education include the Free Tuition Program and Tuition Relief for the Middle Class. These offer non-repayable provincial bursaries to make post-secondary education more accessible.

 

“Today’s announcement perfectly fits into the mandate of the Collège communautaire du Nouveau-Brunswick since it will allow middle-class-family parents to broaden their opportunities to improve their quality of life, whether to re-enter the workforce or pursue their post-secondary studies,” said Liane Roy, president and CEO of the college. “Parents often hesitate to take the plunge because the priority is first and foremost their children and their well-being. But, with relief for child care costs, in conjunction with the Tuition Relief for the Middle Class, parents will be able to send their children to a daycare facility and focus on their studies with peace of mind.”

 

Today’s announcement is part of a larger framework of child care investments and early learning initiatives related to:

 

Quality

 

Accessibility

 

Today’s announcement, excluding the Daycare Assistance Program, is part of a federal-provincial, three-year early learning and child care agreement that commits $71 million in investments to improve early learning and child care for preschool-aged children in the province. More details on the government’s plan to invest and transform the child care and early learning system are available in its Early Learning and Child Care Action Plan, Everyone at their best… from the start: Early Learning and Child Care Action Plan.