Listen to this article
Estimated 4 minutes
The audio version of this article is generated by AI-based technology. Mispronunciations can occur. We are working with our partners to continually review and improve the results.
The Quebec government will be prioritizing families who “live and work in Quebec permanently” over asylum seekers for subsidized spots in daycares, according to the province’s families minister.
In a media statement published on Wednesday, Catherine Blouin said Canadian citizens, permanent residents and people staying in Quebec mainly to work and who hold a closed work permit will be prioritized.
“Asylum seekers, temporary foreign workers holding an open work permit, and international students will, for their part, be eligible for any remaining spots,” Blouin said in a statement.
The decision follows a ruling by the Supreme Court of Canada last March, which declared the exclusion of asylum seekers’ children from early childhood centres (CPEs) — including those whose parents lack a work permit — to be unconstitutional.
Canada’s highest court struck down a 2018 directive from the Philippe Couillard government that had blocked asylum seekers from accessing subsidized child care. The Supreme Court ruled that the policy violated the right to equality, legally compelling the provincial government to revise its regulations.
Blouin said that the decision was made “responsibly” to first meet the needs of families established in the province.

Québec Solidaire criticizes move
The second opposition party, Québec Solidaire (QS), denounced the decision, arguing that it creates a hierarchy among families.
“This is a purely opportunistic electoral tactic to mask this government’s disastrous record regarding the funding of our CPE network,” Andrés Fontecilla, the QS immigration critic, said in a statement.
Alexandre Leduc, the party’s critic for families, echoed those concerns.
“The CAQ should be ashamed of playing politics on the backs of asylum seekers. Is blocking toddlers’ access to daycare really the kind of Quebec we want to build?” Leduc asked.
He called on the government to resolve the child-care shortage by properly funding the network, improving working conditions, and delivering the spots promised years ago.
The Families Ministry noted that since the launch of the Grand chantier pour les familles in 2021 — an initiative to increase the number of available subsidized daycare spots — more than 37,000 subsidized spots have been created across the province, with another 10,587 currently in development.
According to the government’s latest available data, 30,688 children were on the waiting list for early childhood educational services as of May 31, 2025. The province estimates that there are about 5,160 children of asylum seekers aged five or under currently residing in Quebec.
The most recent budget also earmarks the conversion of 5,000 unsubsidized spots into subsidized ones.
Quebec AM10:32Quebec planning to give priority to families established in Quebec over asylum seekers for subsidized daycare spots
The provincial government has announced a plan to prioritize families who live and work in Quebec on a permanent basis over asylum seekers for subsidized daycare spots. This decision follows a recent Supreme Court ruling that Quebec cannot exclude asylum seekers from these spots, as doing so discriminates against women who often carry the primary childcare burden. The ruling concluded a nearly decade-long legal battle on the matter. Guest host Peter Tardif spoke with Sibel Ataogul, the lawyer who represented the woman at the center of that court case, to discuss the implications of this announcement.
Lack of spots is the problem, daycare association says
In a statement sent to Radio-Canada, Geneviève Blanchard — co-executive director of the Association québécoise des CPE (AQCPE) — said she understands the frustration of Quebec families who have been waiting years for a daycare spot and said this “legitimate frustration” is the direct result of a systemic shortage.
She said that deciding which children deserve a spot is not the solution to the shortage.
“As long as there is a shortage of spaces, there will be inequality, regardless of who is prioritized,” Blanchard said.
“Quebec should not have to make this choice. A child who has been waiting for two years deserves a spot. A child who has arrived in a new country, often under difficult conditions, needs one just as much. Both situations are real, and neither should be used to justify prioritizing one over the other.”

Read the full article here




