Ontario will move ahead with a massive and costly
program to offer full-day kindergarten for all four- and
five-year-olds despite an unprecedented $25-billion deficit this
year, Premier Dalton McGuinty said Tuesday.Even though Ontario is expecting to hemorrhage red ink for years
with no end in sight, it's “essential'' that the province invest in
the $1.5-billion-a-year program to build a stronger workforce down
the road, he said.“Parents everywhere are the same,'' he said. “All we want is
for our children to grow up and be the very best that they might be,
to achieve their greatest potential.''Moving forward with all-day kindergarten — billed as a North
American first — may require cuts in other spending areas, McGuinty
warned.“You're waiting for the other shoe to drop? Is that what you're
waiting for?'' he said after touring a Toronto kindergarten class.“It will. It will in due course. That's not the announcement I'm
making here today though.''The province “can't have everything,'' but it will keep funding
its priorities of education and health care, he added.McGuinty's staff couldn't provide a breakdown how much will be
spent on all-day kindergarten over the next five years, but the
government has set aside $500 million over two years to start it up.
The program will be phased in over five years and will cost about
$1.5 billion a year once it's rolled out across the province.Next September, 35,000 kids will be able to enrol in full-day
kindergarten, which McGuinty promised to expand to all eligible
children by 2015. That puts Ontario behind British Columbia, which
plans to offer full-day kindergarten to all of its five-year-olds by
2011.
The Korea Herald – workplace child care lagging
Except for certain conglomerates and state-run companies, a majority of companies do little to meet the childcare needs of their female workers.
Under the current law, companies with more than 300 full-time female employees or more than 500 total employees are required to establish an employer-supported childcare facility, which can accommodate children aged between one and six.
However, according to the data by the Ministry of Health and Welfare and the Ministry of Labor, 51 percent of the companies out of the 533 companies, whose number of female workers exceeds 300 or that of total workers exceeds 500, failed to establish an employer-supported childcare facility, as of the end of 2008.
While child-care centers including public, private and family day-care centers totaled 33,499, the number of employer-supported childcare centers was a fraction at 350, as of the end of 2008, the government data showed.
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