Re: Canada is disgusting
Rich listed 5 Trudeau programs that he loves. I suspect he did a quick google search and has no idea if these programs were a success or failure. Most liberals love free stuff and it seems that Rich is no exception. Free stuff is the heart of liberal policies.
Lets take a look at National Childcare Program.
Like many sectors, childcare faces a labour shortage. Providers struggle to find qualified staff. The YMCA reports that staffing shortages mean none of its Ontario childcare facilities is running at capacity so expansion is out of the question for now. Provinces are trying to fix this by improving salaries and subsidizing tuition for students in early-learning and childcare training programs.
By these measures quality continues to suffer in Quebec. The province has some of the highest caregiver-to-child ratios in Canada, including one caregiver for every five infants. And its current plan increases the number of children a facility can legally accommodate, while lowering the requirements to become a qualified early childhood educator. Childcare is prone to overregulation, but some quality measures such as smaller ratios make sense. Childcare centres can expand their capacity from 80 children to 100 while there are incentives for home childcare providers to increase the number of kids in their care from six to nine. To increase the number of qualified early-childhood educators, the province offers several different levels of qualification. The highest requires nearly 2,500 hours of training while the minimal option is a mix of classroom and work experience totalling 975 hours.
Rich listed 5 Trudeau programs that he loves. I suspect he did a quick google search and has no idea if these programs were a success or failure. Most liberals love free stuff and it seems that Rich is no exception. Free stuff is the heart of liberal policies.
Lets take a look at National Childcare Program.
Like many sectors, childcare faces a labour shortage. Providers struggle to find qualified staff. The YMCA reports that staffing shortages mean none of its Ontario childcare facilities is running at capacity so expansion is out of the question for now. Provinces are trying to fix this by improving salaries and subsidizing tuition for students in early-learning and childcare training programs.
By these measures quality continues to suffer in Quebec. The province has some of the highest caregiver-to-child ratios in Canada, including one caregiver for every five infants. And its current plan increases the number of children a facility can legally accommodate, while lowering the requirements to become a qualified early childhood educator. Childcare is prone to overregulation, but some quality measures such as smaller ratios make sense. Childcare centres can expand their capacity from 80 children to 100 while there are incentives for home childcare providers to increase the number of kids in their care from six to nine. To increase the number of qualified early-childhood educators, the province offers several different levels of qualification. The highest requires nearly 2,500 hours of training while the minimal option is a mix of classroom and work experience totalling 975 hours.
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