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Groups representing publically funded daycares (known as CPEs) and day care workers in quebec city say the responsibilityâs young enhanced secularism law would create numerous challenges for the daycare network and likely weaken services to young children.
âWeâre concerned that the problem raised and the means adopted by Bill 9 are not in line with the challenges and emergencies identified on the ground in the early childhood sector,â the association representing CPEs said in its memoir released Thursday to a National Assembly committee holding consultations on the bill this week.
Bill 9 prohibits workers in CPEs from wearing religious symbols while at work and bans CPEs from serving exclusively kosher or halal food.
Jean-Francois Roberge, Quebecâs minister responsible for secularism, has justified the bill saying religious neutrality of the state ensures equality for all.
âThe bill does not improve either the quality of educational services offered or access to a healthy and safe learning environment,â the Association québécoise des centres de la petite enfance (AQCPE) said in its memoir.
In fact, daycares say the secularism law will exacerbate existing staffing shortages, add financial burdens and weaken trust between CPEs and some parents.
âThere are no studies that show that wearing a religious symbol transmits any religion at all to a child,â Coté said.
The AQCPE surveyed its members to see how many complaints theyâd received about staff attire. Out of 705 respondents, more than 90 per cent said they had never received a complaint.
Among the few complaints received, the association said only about half were related to religious symbols.
The other half related to other clothing or appearance concerns including dirty hair, clothing that is too low-cut, or an educator who refuses to dress up for Halloween.Â
âThis data demonstrates that, although the wearing of religious symbols is present in the network, it remains marginal and does not constitute a widespread problem or a source of recurring tensions for parents or educational teams,â the AQCPE said.
Bill 9 is based largely on the recommendations of a government-commissioned report released last August from a committee that studied secularism, led by lawyers Guillaume Rousseau and Christiane Pelchat.
In that report, Pelchat and Rousseau said daycare staff wearing hijabs was not neutral.
âIt provokes reactions and induces behaviours in young children, especially little girls, which is not surprising given their great susceptibility, linked to their age," Pelchat and Rousseauâs report said.
The AQCPE says Pelchat and Rousseau misunderstood what was going on.
âThey base this assertion on the testimony of six educators, some of whom say that âlittle girls dress up by wearing a headscarf,ââ the AQCPEâs memoir said.
âResearch in developmental psychology demonstrates that such mimicry should not be interpreted as an influence on identity or a risk to development,â the association said.
âRather, it is a demonstration of âsymbolic playâ â or pretend play â which is very important for a child's development.â
Perhaps the biggest potential effect of Bill 9 on the daycare network would be to exacerbate an existing shortage of workers.
The AQCPE says daycares already face a âsevere shortageâ of qualified staff.
They say that means sometimes ideal ratios of staff to children arenât met, the number of available spaces is reduced, replacements arenât available, and shutdowns during summer and holiday periods become longer.
It says reducing the pool of potential staff even further by introducing a new restriction wonât help.
âThis decline in qualified staff directly threatens educational quality throughout the network and risks worsening if Bill 9 reduces the number of future graduates eligible to work,â the association said.Â
Exemption in Quebec's expanded religious symbols ban creates confusion, stokes concerns
Bill 9 includes an acquired rights clause, meaning daycare staff who wear religious symbols and were already in place when the law was introduced could keep their jobs.
But if they moved to another daycare or tried to get another job, they could be denied.
Coté said many of his members switch jobs for various reasons, and that the acquired rights clause wouldnât protect them, which could lead to further staff shortages.
CPEs are also worried about the new provision that prevents them serving exclusively a menu based on a religious precept or tradition, meaning they canât serve only halal or kosher food.
âMany child-care centres that purchase from suppliers offering only halal meat do so not out of religious choice, but because it's the most economical and practical option,â the AQCPE said.
Outlawing exclusively kosher, halal menus at Quebec public institutions worries religious groups
âComplying with this provision could therefore lead to additional costs,â the association said.
It said that means that some daycare centres would have less money to invest in other services, and that some might have to increase their deficits.
The association is asking the government to clarify the rule and perhaps offer an exemption for CPEs that demonstrate they serve such menus for logistical or economic reasons and not on religious grounds.
Another problem area identified by the AQCPE deals with Bill 9âs requirement that anyone who receives services from a child-care provider must do so with their face uncovered.
âWe have several questions regarding the application of this requirement, particularly for mothers whose religion requires them to cover their faces in public,â the association said.
The AQCPE says unlike in schools, parents of daycare-aged children have daily contact with staff.
âEvery morning, the parent enters the building to accompany their child to their classroom. In the evening, they pick up their child and dress them in the changing rooms,â the association said.
The AQCPE said the law could mean that staff would be forced to deny some parents access to daycare buildings.Â
âIf educators are forced to engage in such practices, the relationship with parents could be severely damaged,â the association said.
Both the AQCPE and the CSQ are asking the government to go back to the drawing board and gather more data about the necessity of such a law and its potential consequences.
âPut on the brakes, take the time to get some better analysis of the numbers of workers that could be affected, how the services could be affected,â Coté said.
He noted the Coalition Avenir Québec (CAQ) government never ran on a promise to ban daycare workers from wearing religious symbols.
âSo what we're asking is just abandon those laws, go to the election in October, and then we'll see,â Coté said.
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