Jump to:

Early years sector rallies with petition against childcare voucher withdrawal

Catherine Gaunt, 07 October 2009, 12:00am

More than 7,000 people have signed a petition calling for the Government to re-think plans to scrap tax relief on employer-supported childcare.

Providers of voucher schemes say that withdrawing the scheme will have a negative impact on childcare providers because it will make childcare less affordable.

The petition on the Number Ten website says, 'The UK lags behind the rest of Europe when it comes to helping working parents and this move would be a further step backwards. Penalising working families to help other families go back to work makes no sense at all.'

Alison Chalmers, director of KiddiVouchers, said, 'We believe that many parents would not be able to afford their current childcare arrangements without the help vouchers provide. If the result of withdrawing the voucher scheme is that parents stop using registered childcare, either through giving up work or by asking relatives and friends for help with childcare, there will be a knock-on effect on the income stream for childcare providers. Even for wealthier parents, the loss of vouchers will make care relatively more expensive.'

While welcoming the increase in the number of places for two-year-olds, the National Day Nurseries Association said it was essential that the majority of parents continued to receive Government support.

Chief executive Purnima Tanuku said, 'It is essential that funding this does not come at the expense of support for families more widely by making cuts to employer-supported childcare. This must not impact on those families who rely on existing support to afford the cost of childcare.'

Further information: http://petitions.number10.gov.uk/keepvouchers.

 
 
 
 
 

Directory

Find products, services and suppliers

 
 
 

EYFS review - all the details

EYFS review - all the details

Get all the latest plus background on the Government's reform of the Early Years Foundation Stage

Practice Guides

The latest in our series of guides written by expert practitioners.

Gender
Why are boys and girls different?

Treasure baskets and heuristic play
Ideas for working with babies and toddlers

Business development
Case studies from successful settings

See all the Practice Guides

See all the Management Guides

Follow us on Twitter
Facebook