From Education and Early Childhood Development:
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Higher wages are coming for Nova Scotia’s early childhood educators working in regulated child-care settings thanks to a new provincial investment and the federal government’s contribution under the Canada–Nova Scotia Canada-Wide Early Learning and Child Care Agreement.
Most of the 2,600 early childhood educators will see a wage increase in the range of 30 per cent, retroactive to July 4, 2022.
Becky Druhan, Minister of Education and Early Childhood Development, and Mona Fortier, President of the Treasury Board of Canada, on behalf of Karina Gould, federal Minister of Families, Children and Social Development, made the announcement today, October 11, at the Akerley campus of Nova Scotia Community College in Dartmouth.
“Early childhood educators do incredible, valuable work, and we are excited to make this significant investment that reflects their importance to children, families and the Nova Scotia economy,” said Minister Druhan. “This investment in wages is decades overdue. It will help grow the early childhood education workforce and the child-care sector overall as we transition to a publicly funded system that provides reliable, affordable, quality and accessible care to families. We understand that change impacts the operations of child care, and we will support centres as we work through these changes.”
The Province will provide additional funds to employers by November 1 to allow operators to pay staff in accordance with the new wage scale by mid-November.
Highlights of the announcement include:
- a new wage scale for Level 1, 2 and 3 early childhood educators and directors working in licensed centres and family home child-care agencies that receive funding from the Province
- wage increases retroactive to July 4, 2022
- the wage increases will be between 14 and 43 per cent, depending on classification level and experience
- wage increases will flow through employers (licensed, funded centres and agencies)
- the cost is estimated at about $100 million a year, cost-shared through the Canada–Nova Scotia Canada-Wide Early Learning and Child Care Agreement; the Province currently pays about $25 million a year in wages to operators and the total additional new investment is about $75.4 million.
Early childhood educators in family home child-care centres will also benefit from the higher wages.
Minister Druhan said more work is needed on a benefits plan, including retirement benefits. That work continues, and the plan will be rolled out in 2023.
More information on early childhood educators’ compensation is available at: https://childcarenovascotia.ca/ececompensation
More information on the Canada-Nova Scotia Canada-Wide Early Learning and Child Care Agreement is available at: https://www.canada.ca/child-care

