child care – Michmutters
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Australia

Childcare sector reaching crisis point over workforce shortages and low wages

Community childcare center director Rebecca Stiles is close to breaking point.

After 27 years in the industry, she’s now contemplating what was once unthinkable – joining the exodus from childcare and education.

“That’s actually heartbreaking, to think that crosses my mind, to move on to somewhere else,” she told 7.30.

The reason for her growing stress is staff shortages at her community center at Hillbank, in Adelaide.

“Sometimes I wonder how I cope,” she said.

“I do find I spend most of my time staring at my roster at my desk, wondering what I’m going to do for that afternoon or the next day.”

It’s a similar story across the country.

“It was critical before COVID,” said Elizabeth Death, the chief executive of the industry body Early Learning and Child Care Australia (ELACCA).

“It’s now even more dire.”

There is broad agreement about the root cause of the problem – wages in the sector are just too low.

Working in the sector requires at least a diploma qualification or a bachelor’s degree, but many early childcare educators receive little more than the minimum wage of around $24 an hour.

headshot of Helen Gibbons giving an interview.
Helen Gibbons says early educators have “voted with their feet”, leading to huge vacancies in centers across the country.(ABCNews/7.30)

“You can have a degree and work in an early education setting, and exactly the same degree will allow you to earn at least 30 per cent more if you worked in a school,” said Helen Gibbons, the director of early education at the United Workers Union (UWU).

“It’s just obscene.

“They’ve [early educators] really voted with their feet over the past six months.

“I don’t think there’s a center in the country that is not currently advertising for an early educator.”

Brisbane early childhood teacher Samira Shire said she felt undervalued.

Woman wearing a gray hijab.
Brisbane early childhood teacher Samira Shire has been working in the industry since 2014.(ABC News: Chris Gillette)

“Our wages are one of the lowest in the country — I can’t say it’s the lowest, but it’s really quite close,” she said.

“The bit that bugs me when I read comments from the community is always how people think that we are not qualified, how people think that only a percentage of a center is working as qualified educators and the rest are working without qualification — that’s not the case.”

Impact on children

The high turnover of staff can have a devastating effect on the quality of care and education, according to developmental psychologist Karen Thorpe from the University of Queensland’s Brain Institute.

“Some of our research that we’ve recently reported shows that emotional attachment, and that emotional support and emotional quality of care, has effects on children’s language development, but also we’ve done some data linkage to show it has effects right through to secondary education,” she said.

Woman with short hair wearing a gray jacket and pearl necklace.
Karen Thorpe says early educators are “seriously important” in a child’s development. (ABC News: Michael Lloyd)

Professor Thorpe said there was an overwhelmingly strong case for the federal government to invest more money into early childhood care and learning in order to improve wages and conditions.

“We need to more strongly advocate that these are not just childcare workers,” she said.

“They are seriously important educators at the most serious point in human development.”

Measures to improve pay

Apart from providing more federal funds, one of the obstacles to improving pay rates in the sector is the present structure of Australia’s industrial relations system, according to gender pay expert Meg Smith from the University of Western Sydney.

“There’s only been one successful equal remuneration order in the past 20 years, and I think that speaks to some of the challenges,” she said.

However, Dr Smith said she was encouraged by the Albanese government’s pledge to strengthen the gender equity section of the Fair Work Commission and supporting legislation.

“I am optimistic if those changes are to be implemented and to have applications across multiple paths of the Fair Work Act, I would be optimistic that there’s a capacity for change,” she said.

Two female children choose from a tin of colored texts
The Albanian government has pledged $5.4 billion to make childcare more accessible. (ABC North Queensland: Nathalie Fernbach)

The UWU has organized a national shutdown of the early childhood education and care sector on September 7 to highlight these wage issues and is also calling for a more substantial restructuring of the industry.

A recent Australia Institute report found 77 per cent of service providers are private, for-profit operators — one of the highest rates among OECD countries.

“To achieve the aim that ECEC [Early Childhood Education and Care] in Australia becomes an essential service, like Medicare, it has to be delivered more on a basis of public need than private profit,” Andrew Scott of Deakin University and convenor of the Australia Institute’s Nordic Policy Center said.

“To sustain adequate public expenditure on childcare, and to avoid further escalating fees for parents in Australia, there will need to be less reliance in future on paying subsidies to private, for-profit operators.”

The UWU’s Helen Gibbons said there was a “creeping commercialization” in the sector.

Three pictures of children's artwork hanging on a string.
Australia has one of the highest rates of for-profit early education operators among OECD countries.(ABC News: Chris Gillette)

“We have seen an increasing number of for-profit providers – private companies and private equity – making a lot of money off taxpayers,” she said.

“And it’s going to profit, it’s not going to little children … [it’s] certainly not going to early educators.

“It’s a crazy system.”

ELACCA’s Elizabeth Death disagrees.

She said Australia had strict quality controls that allowed a mixed market to operate effectively, and the government’s immediate focus should be on fixing the staffing crisis.

“I think the most important factor here is not trying to turn the sector upside down at a time we have a workforce crisis, [and] at a time our children need the best, most consistent education care.”

Watch this story on 7.30 on ABC TV and ABC iview.

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Categories
Australia

As rents and mortgage repayments rise, is multi-generational living the secret to thriving in tough economic times?

Staring down the possibility of taking out a large mortgage to buy a house they could barely afford, Luke Saliba and his wife Claire Gooch decided to try something different.

Instead, the young couple moved in with Claire’s mother Sylvia and took out a much smaller mortgage to renovate her house.

“The idea of ​​the nuclear family being disconnected in the suburbs [feels] like it’s been forced upon us over the last 100 years,” Luke said.

“I feel like us challenging that, in this small way, is almost going back to the way things should be.”

Luke and Sylvia sit on the back steps in the sunshine.  Sylvia holds a cup of tea and Luke holds his baby son on his lap from him.
Luke says having a European background means there’s “no stigma attached to living with grandparents”.(ABC News: Rhiannon Stevens)

The living arrangement has allowed Sylvia to stay in her home which was becoming too costly for her to maintain alone.

“I get to stay in a house that I quite like, in an area where I have established friends — it meant that I wouldn’t have any issues,” she said.

Sharing the house has also benefited Luke, Claire and their two young children.

Claire said having a small mortgage of around $350,000 and living in an area with good services meant they were better able to manage financially as the cost of living rises.

“My daughter needs surgery for grommets and adenoids and tonsils,” she said.

“If we didn’t live like this, that would be a problem and we’d be having to make choices between food, rent bills and medical things that the kids have needed.”

Three generations of women sit on a couch reading a picture book to the youngest, who has a dummy in her mouth.
Claire says living with her mother is a great choice but acknowledges that not everyone has the opportunity to tap into generational wealth in this way.(ABC News: Rhiannon Stevens)

Having another adult in the house also meant she and her husband could turn to her mother for advice.

“My mum is very different to how I am and that’s been really good because my kids get stuff that I wouldn’t be able to do with them [and] I get ideas that I wouldn’t have had.”

The living arrangement worked because they tried to relate like housemates, not mother-daughter, she said.

“This is a group house where we’re related, and because we have similar backgrounds … we can probably live together a little bit easier, but living with my daughter is not always easy, but that goes both ways, right?” Sylvia said.

Luke, who is the grandchild of Spanish and Macedonian immigrants, said having a European background meant there was no stigma attached to living with grandparents, and he valued the presence of an older generation in the house.

“If any of us have a bad day, we don’t have to travel to go and touch base and provide that family support. We’ve got it in-house,” he said.

A man, his mother in law and young child sit on the back step of their house in the sunshine.
Sylvia loves being involved in the daily lives of her grandchildren.(ABC News: Rhiannon Stevens)

Multi-generational households growing

Edgar Liu, a senior research fellow at the UNSW’s City Futures Research Centre, said economic circumstances were often the driving factor for people choosing to live in a multi-generational setting.

Dr Liu, who researched multi-generational living over several years and defined them as households with more than one generation of adults, said data from the UK and US showed that the economic shock of the Global Financial Crisis (GFC) increased the number of multi -generational households in those countries.

headshot of a man smiling at camera and wearing glasses.
Edgar Liu says multi-generational households are increasing.(Supplied UNSW)

“From the US, in particular, there is evidence that [showed] a normal rate of growth was about 1.5 per cent, for this kind of household,” he said.

“[That] doubled to about 3 per cent as the GFC came on, and then it continued for a couple of years before it died back down to the normal rate of 1.5 per cent.”

The Australian Bureau of Statistics (ABS) provided new data to the ABC on households containing three generations.

It showed a small increase in three generational living arrangements over recent years, from 275,000 in 2016 to 335,000 in 2021.

But Dr Liu said the largest growth in Australia had occurred in households where two generations of adults lived together.

While finance, especially the cost of care for both the young and the elderly, influenced people’s decisions to form multi-generational households, Dr Liu said family connection was the benefit most often cited once people had experienced such living arrangements.

But he said in Australia this style of living was still stigmatized.

“Acceptance was very conditional, you had to have a reason to do this, you can’t just want to do it,” he said.

“[For example] your mother was in a wheelchair so that’s why she had to live with you,” was seen as an acceptable reason, Dr Liu said, but if someone simply enjoyed living with their mother it would raise questions.

A father, his two children and his parents sit around a coffee table playing cards.  There is a plate of snacks on the table.
A favorite family activity at Irina’s house is cards.(ABC News: Rhiannon Stevens )

The solution to isolation

Irina Kawar has always lived surrounded by generations of family, and she wouldn’t want it any other way.

Irina believes a “joint family”, as it’s called in India, can solve much of the isolation and loneliness experienced in Australia today.

“This is a very good solution for the people who feel isolated because isolation is as big a problem in old age as it is in teenagers,” she said.

“It’s a win-win for everyone, isolated teenagers, isolated grandparents — together, they are happy.”

For Irina, living with her in-laws, husband and two daughters also makes financial and emotional sense.

A daughter husband and wife drink tea at a table.
Irina says living with anyone — child, partner or parent — involves sacrifices, but the benefits outweigh the challenges.(ABC News: Rhiannon Stevens)

She said she never felt alone or frustrated learning to be a parent when her children were young because she always had family around to support her.

As migrants in Australia, having grandparents in the house also helped her children maintain a connection to Indian culture and language, she said.

“[The grandparents] follow daily religious practices, so I don’t have to make an additional effort to bring this into [the girls’] life, they can grow up around those practices as naturally as my husband and I did,” she said.

“If it was just the two of us raising our girls, we would need to make the conscious effort to talk to them in Hindi but living with grandparents — they just learn Hindi naturally.”

For those who have never tried living beyond the nuclear family unit, Irina understands there might be trepidation.

But she said sacrifices were made whoever you lived with, whether it was a partner, child, parents or extended family.

“A little sacrifice is all it takes, but the benefits are great.”

an elderly woman and her daughter in her 60s sit at an outdoor table having cups of tea.
Nina Xarhakos has moved in with her mother Maria, and has become her primary carer.(ABC News: Rhiannon Stevens)

Caring for Maria

Decades since she last lived with her parents, Nina Xarhakos moved in with her mother Maria in 2020.

At 92, Maria suffers mobility issues and was becoming isolated after the death of her husband and several close friends, as well as the closure of her Greek social club due to COVID-19.

“I’ve worked in the community sector with Greek-speaking elderly, [so] I’m very aware of how prevalent depression and anxiety is among the elderly,” Nina said.

She said she respected her mother’s desire to stay at home as long as possible.

“It’s satisfying to me to be able to make that sort of contribution towards her quality of life and I think it strengthens our relationship as well.”

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Categories
Australia

Greens leader Adam Bandt to call on government to make childcare and dental free in National Press Club address

As the cost of living continues to bite, the Greens Party is increasing pressure on the government to introduce new measures to further help households.

In an address to the National Press Club today, Greens Leader Adam Bandt will call on the government to make childcare and dental healthcare free, arguing it would provide thousands of dollars in long-term support for families who are struggling to pay bills.

“These would be long-lasting changes that would deliver real relief to everyday people battling with high inflation and low wages and incomes,” he is expected to say.

“Better than a short-lived cut to fuel excise that can be wiped out by a profiteering petroleum corporation, these measures would mean people were better off not just right now, but next month and next year, year after year.”

The federal government has promised to reduce childcare costs from July next year, estimating 96 per cent of families will be better off.

Under the proposal, the childcare subsidy rate will be lifted to 90 per cent for the first child and the means taper will be less steep than the current system.

For example, a family earning $75,000 will be eligible for a 90 per cent subsidy, while a family earning $120,000 will receive an 82 per cent subsidy.

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