Early Childhood Ireland – ‘Families have waited too long’
13th July 2021
Early Childhood Ireland, the leading organisation in the early years sector, published its Budget 2022 submission today (13.07.21) with a call for government to meet the commitment in the national early years strategy, First 5, to at least double investment by 2028. In Budget 2022, the government must begin to meet this target by increasing funding and announce the plan to achieve it over the following six years.
Early Childhood Ireland supports 3,800 childcare members nationwide, who – in turn – support over 120,000 children and their families.
Commenting today, Frances Byrne, Director of Policy with Early Childhood Ireland, said: “We are calling on the Government to take real and immediate action to increase public investment in childcare.
The Government has committed to reforming and investing in childcare, yet in Budget 2021, despite significant investment in other essential services, childcare funding was not increased.
We are still without a plan or proposal for adequate funding of our sector. Families are poorly served and have waited too long.
“Ireland has consistently remained at the bottom of the class when it comes to investment in childcare. According to the OECD, we invest the least amount in early years of any developed country as a percentage of GDP.
“This lack of investment costs us all. Parents pay the highest childcare fees from take-home pay in the European Union. Providers operate precariously in a highly complex funding model which benefits no-one. Average pay and conditions of employment in the sector remain poor, leading to serious challenges in staff recruitment and retention. All of this impacts on the quality of childcare which our youngest citizens deserve as a fundamental public good.”
Retaining essential support for an essential public service
Frances said the Government’s recognition and support of the childcare sector as an essential public service in the wake of the Covid-19 pandemic must be continued to ensure the sustainability of childcare services.
“COVID-19, while highlighting early years and school-age care as essential, also exposed a sector facing major sustainability challenges.
Historical state underinvestment, complex funding streams and dependence on high parental fees have created an operating model so fragile that it warranted a sector specific version of the Employment Wage Subsidy Scheme in order to remain viable. The scheme currently supports 80% of salaries in childcare settings, more than in any other sector.
“What’s more, the security created by the scheme has enabled childcare providers to invest in measures that have improved quality, ensuring better experiences for children during this terrible global crisis. The Government has committed to a new, fit-for-purpose model. We are calling on them to retain these essential supports until such a model can be properly implemented.”
Pictured are: Teresa Heeney, Chief Executive Officer of Early Childhood Ireland with Flip Przeworek (3yrs), Liz Noronha (4yrs) and V.J Troy (4yrs). (Photo: Leon Farrell/Photocall Ireland).