Doug Ford says Ontario close to child-care deal; province is last to strike an agreement


Ontario is near a child-care take care of the federal authorities, Premier Doug Ford mentioned Tuesday, as his province remained the one jurisdiction and not using a take care of Ottawa for $10-a-day little one care.


Ford informed radio station Q104 Kenora that he's assured Ontario will attain an settlement.


"We're very, very shut," he mentioned. "I am assured we will strike a deal that is going to be useful for everybody in Ontario."


His feedback come after a deal introduced Monday with Nunavut leaves Ontario because the final holdout on a child-care deal.


Prime Minister Justin Trudeau mentioned Monday that he's optimistic the federal government can attain a take care of Ontario.


"We've got been prepared to succeed in an settlement with Ontario for a lot of, many months now," he mentioned. "The body of the settlement has been set out for a very long time."


Training Minister Stephen Lecce mentioned Monday that the province is pushing for greater than the $10.2 billion on provide from Ottawa to make sure that charges might be diminished to $10 a day since Ontario households pay a few of the highest costs within the nation for care.


Lecce mentioned that Ontario can also be making the case that households who ship their youngsters to both not-for-profit or unbiased child-care settings ought to profit from the payment reductions.


The schooling minister has additionally beforehand mentioned that he needs to make sure that any deal will last more than 5 years, and that Ottawa's provide does not take into consideration the $3.6 billion a 12 months that the province spends on full-day kindergarten for four- and five-year-old youngsters.


Households, Kids and Social Improvement Minister Karina Gould mentioned Monday that the agreements are particularly about early studying and little one care.


"We have been very clear from the start that kindergarten is past the scope of the settlement," she mentioned.

This report by The Canadian Press was first printed Jan. 25, 2022.

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