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Mulcair praises NDP’s child-care plan while in Vancouver

WATCH ABOVE: NDP leader Thomas Mulcair claims his plan would greatly increase the amount of regulated daycare spots in provinces like British Columbia.

VANCOUVER – NDP Leader Tom Mulcair has stacked another building block in his party’s universal child-care platform, promising to create 110,000 daycare spaces in British Columbia, where parents pay some of the highest fees in the country.

He said his plan will make it easier for families in a province where two out of three children don’t have access to regulated child care.

“I’ve spoken to mothers forced to choose between their career and their children,” Mulcair said Thursday, during a campaign stop in the riding of Vancouver Granville.

“It goes without saying that it’s women, first and foremost, that have to make that type of sacrifice.”

READ MORE: Here’s everything we know about the NDP’s childcare plan 

Tiny children giggled and played with colourful toys or hugged their parents’ legs as Mulcair re-iterated his plan to create one million child-care spots at $15 per day.

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He was asked if he could guarantee spot for every Canadian child: “that’s the goal.”

The New Democrats first unveiled the policy plank last fall.

WATCH: Tom Mulcair discusses cost and effectiveness of childcare plan

In details released with Thursday’s announcement, the party said more than 50,000 spots would be made available in Vancouver alone.

It said families in the city pay monthly fees on average of $1,215 for one infant, according to the Canadian Centre for Policy Alternatives. A comparable spot in Quebec can cost as low as $152 each month.

Mulcair said he has spoken to boards of trade and chambers of commerce across the country, including the Surrey Board of Trade, about workers’ needs.

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“They realize that in helping families get affordable quality childcare, that they as employers are also being given help,” he said.

He said the lack of reliable child care is estimated to cost B.C. businesses more than $600 million per year, again citing the Canadian Centre for Policy Alternatives.

Grandmother Alicia Matas listened to the announcement while watching her two grandchildren, boys ages two and four, jump in a bouncy castle set up behind Mulcair.

She said afterwards the provision of more child-care spots “would make a difference, for sure.”

Mulcair is scheduled for another campaign stop in Winnipeg later this afternoon.

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