A stark warning that childcare in Leitrim is on the brink of “absolute collapse” was issued by Cllr Maeve Reynolds, who passionately brought forward a motion on the issue.
Cllr Reynolds proposed that the Council contact the Minister for Children, Disability and Equality to request an equalisation grant to offset the cost of commercial rates for private childcare providers.
Describing the situation as a “serious imbalance,” she pointed out that private providers are paying commercial rates, unlike community-run services, which are exempt. Many private providers have not increased their fees despite rising costs and are now struggling to remain viable.
“Yet, unlike most businesses, private providers can’t increase their fees to cover the rising costs. Some private providers in Ireland haven’t increased their fees in over a decade, and we all know how much input costs have increased,” Cllr Reynolds said.
She explained that private providers are effectively locked into a fixed income model regardless of inflation, insurance hikes, wage increases, or commercial rates.
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“No other sector is asked to absorb rising costs without the freedom to adjust prices,” she added.
While acknowledging the importance of commercial rates to local authorities, stating they are vital for public infrastructure and services, Cllr Reynolds clarified: “I’m not looking for the rates to be taken away from the local authority but for the Minister to give an equalisation grant to private providers that pay commercial rates.”
“Private childcare providers aren’t just businesses, they’re an essential public service, and it’s about fairness,” she continued.
She also noted that in recent weeks she has heard of numerous childminders in the area who, from September, will no longer be minding children.
“We are on the precedent of an absolute collapse of childcare in Leitrim. It’s as serious as it’s ever been, and we have childcare providers on their knees. We are at absolute crisis stakes,” she warned.
Waiting lists for creches are now so extensive that babies are being placed on them as soon as they are born.
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“This is something short term that can be done to help them pay their staff more,” she added.
Cllr Reynolds’s motion received strong support from fellow councillors. Cllr Felim Gurn emphasised another challenge facing the sector: the requirement of four years of college to become a childcare practitioner, yet wages remain just above minimum wage.
Cllr Warnock also highlighted the broader implications, warning that the childcare crisis will have a knock-on effect on rural schools in Leitrim, with falling enrolment numbers threatening their future, as families won’t remain in areas lacking childcare.
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