
The Growth Budget That Starves Early Childhood Education!
'The ECE sector can't grow when it's being starved of funding,' says Kathy Wolfe, CE Te Rito Maioha.
'Investment in education is vital for the wellbeing of everyone in Aotearoa New Zealand, so for ECE to receive a 0.5% funding increase while inflation runs at 2.5% is nothing less than a funding decrease at the worst possible time.'
'The ECE sector has experienced a multi-year funding freeze prior to 2017 under National leaving the sector approximately 11% behind CPI over the last 10 to 15 years. While the government touts the new Social Investment Fund, it is ironic that ECE, which aligns with a social investment approach of early and effective intervention to improve outcomes for tamariki, has yet again been stifled in a so-called investment budget.'
'The time and place for investment in our future is now, and that investment must begin with our youngest tamariki. ECE providers will have no option but to pass the increased costs of providing early learning onto parents. This budget has provided few opportunities to reduce the cost of living for parents with children.'
'With around 194,597 tamariki, 33,309 teaching staff (qualified and unqualified) and 4,409 service providers[1] in ECE being affected by funding decisions, we were very hopeful that the government's stated priority for education would result in appropriate investment for early childhood education. On this priority, the government has not delivered.'
'This is a missed opportunity for the government to deliver on some of the systemic changes that are sorely required and to fund the sector appropriately. Whilst the sector are grateful that there is a small increase of 0.5% in funding for ECE providers, it doesn't even keep up with inflation which is running at 2.5%. That's effectively a funding cut and that's very disappointing.'
'Te Rito Maioha has been continuously advocating for an ECE Funding Review to fix a broken system, so we are pleased that funding of $3.8 million has been confirmed to address funding and finally rectify fit for purpose and meaningful investment in ECE to all providers, teachers, tamariki and communities. However, any expected changes are likely to occur no earlier than 2027, far too late to support a stressed ECE sector and a better increase for the sector, the very least at inflation, would've landed better.'
Te Rito Maioha's Five Point Plan outlining the changes that are required in the Early Childhood Sector.
Improve teacher: child ratios
Our ECE ratios are currently among the worst in the OECD. This needs to change to ensure tamariki receive the quality education, care, and attention they need to thrive, learn, and stay safe.
Develop and implement a Strategic Teaching Workforce Plan
We need a Strategic Teaching Workforce Plan to attract, retain, and grow a professional, culturally responsive ECE teaching workforce within Aotearoa New Zealand. This means prioritising ongoing investment in initial teacher education across all education sectors and ensuring supply and demand for teachers is well managed through this plan.
Fund ECE services sufficiently
Provide sufficient funding for ECE services to deliver quality education for tamariki and ensure kaiako are paid fairly and equitably—without placing the burden of high fees on parents.
Replace the ECE funding model
The current ECE funding model is outdated and not fit for purpose. The sector urgently needs an investment strategy and funding model that better supports today's working whānau, tamariki and ECE services to deliver quality education.
Simplify regulations
Regulations should ensure tamariki safety and quality ECE delivery without burdening ECE services or kaiako with repetitive, labour-intensive paperwork from multiple government agencies that keep them from tamariki education and wellbeing.
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