Mother of twins with disabilities calls B.C.'s child-care system 'opposite of inclusive' - Action News
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British Columbia

Mother of twins with disabilities calls B.C.'s child-care system 'opposite of inclusive'

Langley mother Michelle Martin desperately wants to get her twins into child care. Both have disabilities, which means she can't access daycare until the boys both have support workers.

Michelle Martin says she's unable to access care for her sons until they both have support workers

Michelle Martin says she only gets a few hours' sleep in between caring for her children and working full-time at night. (Shawn Foss/CBC News)

Michelle Martin spends her days caring for her three-year-old twin boys,Axel and Jaxon.

They bothhave cerebral palsy and Jaxon is also blind, which means accessing child careis difficult. The B.C. mother has found multiple daycare spots in Langley, but because of the boys' disabilities, they can't attend unless they have a support worker through the province's Supported Child Development Program.

The twins have been on a wait list for a support worker for more than two years now.

With no child care, Martin left her corporate job at the end of maternity leave. But the family needs a dual income to help pay for the kids' needs, so shestarted two small businesses to make ends meet and now works a full day as a copy writer and marketing consultant after putting the kids to bed, seven days a week.

Martinsaid she wantsAxel and Jaxon to have the opportunity to play with other kids and learn new things.

"Theysay you're on the wait list and there's no other option. What it actually means is the opposite of inclusive child care, because they're being excluded based on the fact of their disabilities," Martin told CBC News.

Martin works as a freelance marketing consultant and copywriter, and also owns a screen print shop that she operates from her house. (Shawn Foss/CBC News)

Advocacy group Inclusion BCestimates there are thousands of children with disabilities who are waiting to access a support worker through the province's program.

"I do think it's extremely unfair how long we ask families to wait for basic community services such as child care," said Inclusion BC'sexecutive director, Karla Verschoor.

There is no standardized wait time across the province, either, as the wait lists are attached to a specific child development centre.Verschoor said that means that in northern B.C., there may be access to a support worker right away, but in the Lower Mainland it could be a lot harder to find someone.

Support coming for more families, provincesays

The Supported Child Development Program offers consulting and support services to familiesand child-care centres that enable children with disabilities to participate in daycare, according tothe Ministry ofChildren and Family Development.

The ministry saidit will support 2,000 more families with access to this program under the 2021 budget.

The ministry also saidthere's no provincial wait list for this program, as each contracted agency that provides the supported child development program manages its own intake.

But as Martin continues to advocate for her twins, she fears she faces several more years without help.

"I can't do it anymore... I need them in child care," she said.

With files from Anita Bathe, Ashley Moliere and Joel Ballard