By KATE ELLIS
A growing population needs community services to grow with it.
It makes sense that if you don’t plan for enough child care centres to meet growing demand from families there will be a shortage of child care places.
That is exactly what has happened in our major cities.
When the Prime Minister and I did a live blog on child care issues with Mamamia readers in June we heard some very clear messages. One mother said:
Top Comments
Addison Lee in the UK lets you bring your baby to the office. You must watch show 'babies in the office'. Brilliant.
Kate child care centres take the burden of care of children away from women and simply place it on other women, child carers. This doesn't challenge men's place in the work force at all. What is your government doing about making employers of fathers more flexible in their acceptance of men as parents by giving them part-time or flexible hours while their kids are young and giving them access to paid paternity leave? Only through women and men sharing the parenting role will the wage disparity problem be resolved, women are still the ones taking the most time out of the workforce when children are small.
The child care issue has become just another 'woman's problem' as it is always stacked up against the woman's income as to whether child care can be justified and it is women's return to work that is affected by child-care waiting lists. In an ideal world, Mum and Dad would take half the baby years off work each, to get through those early years but men just can't get access to part-time work or paid leave like women can. Wby?