Senator Sherlock brings Inner City childcare workers to Leinster House to protest new National Childcare Scheme
Senator Marie Sherlock yesterday joined with childcare workers in organising a protest outside Leinster House in opposition to the exclusion of some of the most disadvantaged children from the new National Childcare Scheme. Senator Sherlock, who is based in Dublin Central, has been working with childcare providers who first flagged problems with the National Childcare Scheme in early 2021.
The protest was attended by approximately 50 providers and workers, including representatives of the Association of Childhood Professionals (ACP), the Federation of Early Childhood Providers (FECP) and SIPTU’s Big Start campaign.
The protest was also joined by frontline childcare providers based in Dublin’s North Inner City, including the Daughters of Charity on Henrietta street, Lourdes Youth and Community Services (LYCS) and the Community Afterschools Project (CASPr).
Speaking at the protest, Senator Sherlock said:
“Children’s needs must be put at the heart of any childcare scheme, irrespective of their parent’s circumstances. However, under the new National Childcare Scheme, there are children who need the stability and support of childcare or afterschool care who now find themselves excluded, when under previous State childcare support schemes they would qualified.
“This requires immediate action and we need to ensure that every child gets a fair start. Many of the families affected by this live in extremely challenging situations – addiction, mental health problems, physical ill-health or cramped accommodation. For these families, creche or afterschool plays a vital party in providing stability and reassurance in the lives of highly vulnerable children.
“Our childcare system is already pushed to the brink of its capacity, and we have been inundated with correspondences from providers affected. One early years manager told me that they have a situation where a six year boy whose mother, a lone parent, has had numerous mental health difficulties and very poor literacy. She depends on the afterschool service to help her son with his homework and to provide emotional support for his difficult behaviour. A child in these circumstances would have qualified for aftercare support under the old system, but from this September will qualify for nothing under the new National Childcare Scheme.
“Or the situation of a six year old girl whose mother is trying so hard to make a fresh start in life after years of addiction. As her daughter doesn’t qualify for support under the new National Childcare Scheme, the service offered her a reduced fee at a loss to them, but she couldn’t sustain it after a period of months. That child now has no supports around her.
“Or the situation of the low income family where the mother experienced a stroke, the father works long hours to sustain the family and the children do not qualify for after-school support because the Department deems that there is a parent at home to care for the children.
“As well as the impact on already disadvantaged children, there is also a major financial implication for providers, some of whom are forced to consider closing some of their services. We already have a major shortage of places in the North inner city and elsewhere in the country. We simply cannot afford any further closures.
“No child should be left behind. I am calling on government to hear the families crying out for better support and a fairer start for their child.”