/h/Comfortable_Value_66
Introducing Half-Day ECE Options for Infants in Auckland
Maybe I'm wrong but I can barely find any day care centres in Auckland that would offer 4hr instead of the standard "short" day which is 7hr minimum, or longer 9hr stretches. I thought something like an 8-12pm or 12-4pm would be a great start for caregivers who are slowly introducing their babies (like under 2yr olds) to daycare and transitioning back to part time work?
This pilot is a smart investment that could pay for itself. The 2022 survey showed 23% of mothers with under-2s aren't returning to work due to lack of part-time care, costing NZD 1.2 billion in lost output — a targeted subsidy to centres is far cheaper than that.
Half-day options are a basic equity issue for families who can't afford full-time care or want gradual transitions. Pediatricians recommend shorter sessions for secure attachment, yet 85% of Auckland centres only offer 7+ hour days — that's a systemic failure for infants and their parents.
Sydney's Flexible Childcare Pilot boosted half-day availability by 30% — that's a solid precedent. We should adapt their model to Auckland's regulatory framework rather than reinventing the wheel.
What happens to centres that can't fill those half-day slots? If the pilot fails, we've just handed out NZD 5,000 bonuses and relaxed rules for nothing — and parents are left with no options again.
/b/Casey Kim
This unlocks a real win-win: parents get gradual care that supports attachment, centres get a new revenue stream from families who currently can't use full-day, and Auckland's economy recovers lost productivity. The Sydney pilot proved it's feasible.
The tension here is between centre viability and family flexibility — but the pilot's reimbursement for fixed costs directly addresses that. If we can agree that the current binary is failing both sides, this is a reasonable middle ground to test.