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Nova Scotia to dramatically expand, subsidize child care after $35M federal deal

The funding announcement was made at a Halifax-area day care on Wednesday. Minister of Families, Children and Social Development Jean-Yves Duclos and Premier Stephen McNeil were on hand. Marieke Walsh/ Global News

Nova Scotia will be getting more than 100 new child care sites and boosted subsidies for families under a $35 million deal with Ottawa that aims to make care more accessible and affordable in the province.

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Nova Scotia is the sixth province or territory to sign on to an agreement reached in June known as the Multilateral Learning and Child Care Framework.

READ: Ottawa signs $7B national child care deal with provinces

The funding will create 15 new regulated child care centres and 90 new home-based child care sites.

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Up to 500 new child care spaces would be created through the three-year deal, with money also being used to boost subsidies for 675 more children with families making between $35,000 and $70,000 a year.

Education Minister Zach Churchill says the funding could see the province subsidize up to 75 per cent of the cost of a space per child.

WATCH: Trudeau discusses creation of subsidized child care spaces

According to the province, the average cost of child care is $10,660 per year.

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