Winnipeg Free Press (Newspaper) - January 26, 2015, Winnipeg, Manitoba
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CITY & BUSINESS
CITY EDITOR: SHANE MINKIN 204- 697- 7292 I CITY. DESK@ FREEPRESS. MB. CA I WINNIPEGFREEPRESS. COM
MONDAY, JANUARY 26, 2015 B 1
F OR years, when things have been relatively
quiet at the Sunny Mountain daycare, Debra
Page and Claire Ferrer jump in the car and
take a real estate cruise.
Page and her second- in- command have known
for years their cramped location in a Main Street
strip mall was far from ideal. They've eyeballed
vacant lots in nearby Garden City, school fields,
community clubs, underused parks, even an old
funeral home in a bid to finesse a deal for an affordable
new location.
Now, those wishful- thinking tours are suddenly
desperate. One of the city's best daycares will
have to move or close in the next two or three
years because of another rent increase. In June,
the annual rent on their 6,000- square- foot stripmall
location will increase to $ 17,000.
" We have to get out of here. The rent for this
place will be over $ 100,000 by the end of next
year," said Page, the executive director of Sunny
Mountain and its satellite locations. " It's really
tough. It scares the parents. I'm scared for the
parents."
Sunny Mountain's Main Street location at
Leila Avenue provides care for roughly 100 kids,
including many low- income ones. Its looming
crisis is emblematic of the financial pressures on
Winnipeg's patchwork of non- profit daycares that
operate close to the bone, where volunteer parent
councils are often on the hook for thousands in
fundraising each year, sometimes backstop mortgages
themselves and struggle to stay solvent
despite significant new provincial spending on
child care.
Cash is even tighter for daycares paying market
rents in commercial locations such as strip
malls. Those get the same per- child funding as
non- profit daycares located in cheaper spots,
such as schools. And because provincial capital
funding is focused on building new spaces to alleviate
a huge shortage, existing daycares don't
qualify for cash to renovate or relocate.
Across town from Sunny Mountain, Rainbow
Day Nursery is facing a $ 100,000 deficit this
year, largely because of commercial rents. That's
money executive director Diane Hale would
much prefer to spend on salaries to keep talented
early- childhood educators on staff.
Five of Rainbow's six locations in the Southdale
and Island Lakes area are in commercial spots
such as strip malls. Rainbow's major landlord,
the development firm Ladco, has been excellent
to work with, especially in backstopping construction
of a new- ish Vermillion Road location.
But Hale said more needs to be done for the
many centres at the mercy of market- rate rents.
The rent crunch affects non- profit daycares all
over Canada, including one high- profile one in
Toronto's financial district - its 25- year rent- free
lease expired last year. The Scotia Plaza daycare,
which serves several lower- income families, will
close later this year to make way for a for- profit
centre.
Sunny Mountain has a nearly 500- name waiting
list for its sites, and Page says it will be disastrous
for parents if the Main Street location closes.
Ideally, Sunny Mountain would love to move
to a school site in the Seven Oaks or River East
Transcona school division. Already, Sunny Mountain
has three school- based satellite sites, including
one under expansion at Sherwood School in
Elmwood.
At school sites, kids can transition more easily
into kindergarten, the rent is roughly a quarter of
the cost of a commercial site and daycares often
don't pay utilities and have access to janitorial
services, said Page. Sunny Mountain needs about
two baseball diamonds- worth of space, but getting
school divisions to agree can be tricky.
Page has a " not if I can help it" attitude about
Sunny Mountain's possible closure. She's confident
that, in the next couple of years, before
Sunny Mountain's finances get too dire, she and
her parent board can find a solution.
" Since I became director in 2004 I have been
in Sunny Mountain daycare survival mode," said
Page. " I've promised Claire I won't retire until
we figure it out."
maryagnes. welch@ freepress. mb. ca
CHILD- CARE
CRUNCH
Rising rent imperils daycares
PHOTOS BY DAVID LIPNOWSKI / WINNIPEG FREE PRESS
Hoisting the haggis
Haggis bearers Sandra and Ross Madder carry in the Scottish pudding - consisting of vegetables and seasoned
sheep innards - at the 108th annual Robbie Burns Dinner held at Holiday Inn Winnipeg South Sunday
night. On Jan. 25, the birth of Scottish poet Robert Burns is celebrated with a traditional Burns Supper.
Desperate operators
seek alternative sites
By Mary Agnes Welch
PHOTOS BY WAYNE GLOWACKI / WINNIPEG FREE PRESS
Sunny Mountain Day Care Centre director Debra Page ( second from left) and manager Claire Ferrer -
with two of their charges, Zoey ( left) and Mary - are feeling the crunch of rising rent.
' We have to get out of here. The rent for this place will be over $ 100,000 by the end of next year' - Sunny Mountain executive director Debra Page
B_ 01_ Jan- 26- 15_ FP_ 01. indd B1 1/ 25/ 15 9: 50: 37 PM
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