Childcare centre director Maria Routsis said it had been a challenging period for the sector.
(ABC News: Chris Taylor) Australia's childcare sector is emerging from the
Omicron wave in "crisis", with more than one in 10 centres needing a
government waiver to legally operate because they do not havenough
workers.
New
figures from the Education Department show that 11.2 per cent of the
country's childcare centres need special permission to open, due to
staffing shortages, most of them because they have been unable to employ
a single university-educated teacher as mandated by law.
The
majority of educators in early learning have diploma- or
certificate-level training but the government also requires at least one
university graduate to lead staff and communicate with families.
In
2013, the number of centres granted waivers for staffing was just 5 per
cent. In 2019, prior to the pandemic, it was 7.4 per cent.
Macquarie
University's Professor Sandi Wong — a leading expert on early learning
— likened childcare centres operating without an educational leader to
the Australia cricket team playing without a captain.
She said the sector was "in crisis".
"And that will only impact on the children and their learning and development.
"[Without such educators] we just don't see the high quality that we want and that those children need.
"They
tend to be the ones [who] notice if the children aren't growing in
quite the way that they should be. They lead the team to support
families and to work with families [who are], often, going through quite
challenging times."
The new data comes as the sector deals with a wave of job losses during the pandemic as well as significant economic pressures from COVID-19 closures.
It's
not yet known how many early learning educators have left the sector
over the past two yeas but, according to lobby group Thrive by Five,
employers were looking for more than 14,000 early learning staff in
December 2021.
Thrive by Five said that meant early learning operators had positions vacant equivalent to 9.5 per cent of the entire workforce.
The early learning sector has received bailouts from the federal government during COVID-19's Delta and Alpha lockdowns, including free childcare for all in the winter of 2020.
Under pressure over the treatment of women, the government pledged more than $3 billion more for preschool and childcare rebates in its most recent budget.
Senior government figures have said that — compared to other parts of the economy — the industry had received generous aid.
However,
many operators and experts said the government should be increasing its
annual, $9 billion spend in order to lift wages and ensure operators
can attract and retain good staff.
'They need us to stay open'
Those
staff shortages have impacted parents as the Omicron wave of COVID-19
saw infections soar and parents left scrambling for care.
Samantha Callaghan is a mother to Patrick, 4, and Rachel, 2.
Last
month, the centre she sends her children to — in Haberfield in Sydney's
west — had to close its doors because a student tested positive for
COVID-19.
Ms Callaghan got the call as she was preparing for a busy week.
"The
centre was closed for one week, completely, and some of the rooms were
closed for a further week. So, from that point on ... [Patrick and
Rachel had] been off for about four weeks, with [the] Christmas
holiday," Ms Callaghan said.
"Their behaviour, the way they reacted to things, was very different."
Maria Routsis is the director and an educator at the centre where the Callaghan children attend.
"It's
been challenging as a service. It's been challenging as an individual.
It's been challenging as a director," Ms Routsis said.
Ms Routsis knows firsthand how hard it is to fill staff positions right now, with waivers common across the sector.
She said more funding was needed to pay staff wages attractive enough to retain them in the industry.
She
appreciated how much the families in her local community depended on
their service and just how much they needed her to stay open.
"We
do have a lot of frontline workers [as clients]. We've got teachers,
we've got nurses, we've got some doctors, we've got a very wide
community of families [who] attend the service and they need our doors
to stay open," Ms Routsis said.
Centres may soon 'need to close'
Advocates, including Professor Wong, are warning that sudden closures may not fade after Omicron's peak.
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