Tuesday, 21 June 2022
Questions without notice and ministers statements
Ministers statements: early childhood education
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Mental Health and Wellbeing Bill 2022
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Victorian Energy Efficiency Target Amendment Bill 2022
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Introduction and first reading
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Alert Digest No. 9
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Appropriation (Parliament 2022–2023) Bill 2022
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Knox athletics community
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Marlo to Cape Conran bike path
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Country Fire Authority South Warrandyte station
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Steven Lopes OAM and Nicole Lopes OAM
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Patricia Ryan
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Philip Sutton
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AGL Energy
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Trish Sweeney
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Sean Bell
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Country League Football Association Championships
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Casey Crusaders Rugby Club
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Andrew Gai
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Elijah Buol
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Monash City Council outdoor dining
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Anthony Mardling
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Education Legislation Amendment (Adult and Community Education and Other Matters) Bill 2022
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Absence
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Questions without notice and ministers statements
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Ministers statements: early childhood education
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Ministers statements: early childhood education
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Ministers statements: early childhood education
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Native forest logging
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Ministers statements: early childhood education
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Energy policy
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Ministers statements: early childhood education
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Croydon electorate
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Bills
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Education Legislation Amendment (Adult and Community Education and Other Matters) Bill 2022
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Sustainable Forests Timber Amendment (Timber Harvesting Safety Zones) Bill 2022
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Second reading
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Adjournment
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Union Road, Surrey Hills, level crossing removal
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Overport Primary School
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Cape Conran Coastal Park
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Springfield Park, Box Hill North
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Regional perinatal services
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Panton Hill Pre School
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Northern Victoria hospitals
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Elder abuse
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Cobden Health
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Early childhood education
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Responses
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Ministers statements: early childhood education
Mr PALLAS (Werribee—Treasurer, Minister for Economic Development, Minister for Industrial Relations) (14:32): I rise to provide an update to the house on one of the biggest public policy and economic reforms that this state has ever seen. Last Thursday the Andrews Labor government announced Best Start, Best Life—an ambitious overhaul of the early childhood education and care policy areas—with a massive $9 billion investment over the next decade to save families money and to support women to return to the workforce. It is an investment. It is an investment in families and in the future of our state.
We know that childcare costs are crippling family budgets. We are seeing households spending up to 20 per cent of their income to cover these ever-increasing costs. And without better access to child care many parents, mainly women, are being held back from working the jobs and the hours that they want. We know that workforce participation is key to driving economic growth, and this reform will provide a massive boost to Victoria’s workforce. Families tell me that child care is too expensive, while many employers tell me that they are struggling to fill labour shortages. This once-in-a-generation reform can help fix both of these problems and deliver massive dividends to our state by reducing disincentives for parents to work. This investment is a down payment on our future productivity. As Sonneman and Jackson said to the Australian Financial Review just days ago, these childcare reforms will deliver economic benefits for decades to come. Modelling from the Front Project and PwC indicates that for every dollar government spends on child care and preschool, $2 will be returned to the economy.