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Russell Broadbent criticises Albanese government for breaking a promised 15 percent wage increase for childcare care workers
The Albanese government's childcare wage grant fails, with 85% missing out, small businesses struggling, and parents facing higher fees due to excessive bureaucracy and red tape.
Russell Broadbent here, your Independent Member for Monash. Last December, the Albanese government agreed to deliver a 15 percent wage increase for Early Childhood Education and Care workers. This works out to be around an extra $100 per week in the pockets of our essential childcare workers, with the government set to chip in $3.6 billion dollars to make it happen.
Russell Broadbent emphasised the Albanese government promise on a 15% wage increase for childcare workers, funding $3.6 billion, but bureaucratic hurdles left many without the intended $100 weekly boost
Childcare grant failure
Now, the money from this $3.6 billion dollar grant, delivered by the Department of Education, was meant to cover the government's mandated wage increases for childcare workers. But it turns out to be all smoke and mirrors.
The Australian newspaper reported last week that the Federal Education Department's grant guidelines had left 85 percent of the nation's childcare workers without their promised $100 a week pay rise.
And those small daycare owners - the ones we see in regional areas like ours - have rightly railed against the bureaucratic red tape, opting to ignore the grant and hike their fees up instead. Which means it's the parents who will pay more in the long run.
Flawed grant system
The grant sounds great in theory - small businesses wouldn't be forced to rip money out of thin air to cover mandated wage increases for their workers. But it's not so great when, as one daycare owner puts it, "it takes two admin staff with three 8 hour working days to see whether it's even worth them applying"!
So, I agree with this daycare owner when she says this grant is a joke. I agree when she says that time-consuming compliance has gone through the roof. And I agree when she says the system is complicated, difficult to understand and was rolled out too fast without proper consultation.
Our early educators do some of the most important work in the country, but at the same time they're the most underpaid and under-valued. So what good is a wage rise if it's not going to these valuable and hardworking people? It's smoke and mirrors. And that's justice as I see it.
Pictures from Russell Broadbent MP website.
Source: http://gippsland.com/
Published by: news@gippsland.com

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