Or
perhaps this award recognizes the past 15 years, when as
director of SPECIALINK I took what we had learned and developed
there in Glace Bay on the road — demonstrating across
Canada that high quality child care must include children
with special needs.
I’m
sure all this was considered by those who determined to
give me this significant award, and for this I am grateful.
But
this recognition is not mine alone.
First,
it belongs to the thousands of parents across Canada who
have raised children with special needs — raised them
despite the lack of appropriate supports.
It
belongs to the Early Childhood Educators who were determined
to include children with special needs in their regular
child care programs — staff who, despite very little
provincial or federal support, refused to use that lack
of supports as an excuse and, instead, devised programs
that delivered quality child care for ALL children.
It
belongs to the children themselves — children with
special needs and those we call typically developing children
— children who have played together and have helped
us all learn that inclusive child care works, is the right
thing to do, and will make a better Canada for us all.
And
it belongs, as well, to all of us who have fought for a
universal, high quality, accessible, affordable and inclusive
child care program for all Canadians, including the president
of this university.
As
you must know, we Canadians were that close to having a
truly universal and inclusive national child care program.
The Early Learning and Child Care Agreements, signed by
the federal/provincial/territorial governments in 2005 launched
this signature plan. When the Conservative government came
to power that initiative was immediately cancelled. In its
place, the government gives out, like Halloween candy, a
monthly gift of $100. A taxable $100. Which means that every
child under 6 years old receives, after taxes, from 50 to
70 dollars a month. That amount will buy only a few days
of child care, nothing more. And there are no requirements
or standards regarding how the money is spent.
But
knowing the value of the words “universal child care”
— knowing the need and the hunger — the present
government has used those same words to describe this monthly
handout.
Leaving
the children with a friend or grandmaw is not a universal
program. A few days a month at a child care center is not
universal child care. A program that does not assure quality
early education for all children regardless of income or
special needs is certainly not universal child care.
But
consider this: Many of you — most of you — will
soon require, or perhaps already require, good child care.
You’ll need child care so that you can confidently
carry out your daily work, whether you are the sole breadwinner
or a single parent or in today’s typical home with
two adults in the workforce. You will need early childhood
education even if you are a stay-at-home parent, recognizing
the values in socialization and health and early learning
that first rate child care can provide.
Moreover,
I guarantee you that there are people in this room who will
need child care for their children with special needs.
And
if we do not face critical issues now — the elephant
in the room that the current administration thinks it can
hide under a 100 dollar tablecloth — many of you will
face the same dilemmas that parents are facing everyday
across this country.
When
you go looking for early education for your children, for
most of you it simply will not be there. Even here in Manitoba
where standards and pay and subsidies are higher than in
most provinces, you will face affordability and quality
issues, long waiting lists, problems of location and hours
of service. And if your child has a special need, the problems
will double or triple. Without child care, you may not be
able to work at all.
The
current federal program called “universal” is
a national disaster and a tremendous disappointment, especially
for those of us who have lived the issues, and who have
fought for a genuinely universal and inclusive system all
these years.
I
was lucky. I found my cause…as well as my life’s
work. I don’t expect you all to become committed Early
Childhood Educators and leave behind the opportunities offered
by your B.Eds and your B.Scs — but I do urge you to
become champions for universal inclusive child care for
Canada. Do it for selfish reasons – your own children
deserve it, and your nieces and nephews too, and even if
you don’t intend to have a family, do it because it
is right.
Genuine
universal inclusive child care must become one of the pillars
of the Canada we want — along with our commitment
to democracy, our Charter of Rights and Freedoms, and our
traditions of peacekeeping.
As
you may know, the University of Winnipeg is the new home
for the SpeciaLink Centre. It will flourish here under the
direction of Debra Mayer and the inspiration and leadership
of President Axworthy.
The
University of Winnipeg is the right new home for SpeciaLink.
The University has a strong tradition of saying “yes”
— through the new Opportunities Fund, through accommodations
for adult students with fulltime jobs, for people for whom
English is a second language. It has said “yes”
to providing a welcoming environment for Aboriginal students,
through immigrant students and through support for Hurricane
Katrina victims. President Axworthy has an exemplary record
of fairness, of saying “yes”, from his child
care vision during his time as Human Resources Development
Minister to his work as
Foreign
Minister, getting the United Nations to adopt the landmines
treaty, the UN Convention on the Rights of Children and
the “Requirement to Protect” commitment.
You
each take with you a solid basis on which to build good
careers with strong ethical foundations.
And
I hope that you, in whatever you undertake in your life,
will be blessed with the ability to see the greater possibilities
of your work — to discover ways to make your teaching,
your research, your industry, your life as open and inclusive
as it might be. And that you will have the courage to say
“yes.”
You
have the tools. Plus youth…get out there and change
things for the better.
Thank
you. |