Supreme Court to hear Quebec’s challenge to daycare access for asylum seekers

Montreal·New

In a decision released Thursday, the Supreme Court says it will hear Quebec’s appeal of a February 2024 decision from the province’s highest court, which found that Quebec’s daycare rules are discriminatory.

Quebec government lost case in both Court of Appeal and lower court

The exterior of a large grey building with a green roof. It's the supreme court of Canada. Canada's parliament can be seen in the distance.
The Supreme Court of Canada will render a final ruling on the case of access to subsidized daycares for asylum seekers. (Benoit Roussel/CBC)

The Supreme Court of Canada says it will hear a challenge from the Quebec government to a lower court ruling granting asylum seekers access to subsidized daycare spaces.

In a decision released Thursday, the Supreme Court says it will hear Quebec’s appeal of a February 2024 decision from the province’s highest court, which found that Quebec’s daycare rules are discriminatory.

That decision upheld a Superior Court of Quebec ruling. 

The Court of Appeal said asylum seekers who hold a valid work permit are entitled to register their children in Quebec’s public daycare system.The case originated with a woman from the Democratic Republic of Congo who had a work permit but whose three children were denied access to the heavily subsidized network.

They were denied because Quebec’s rules provided access to the system only once refugee status was granted by the federal government.

Spaces in the highly sought-after network cost roughly $9 a day.

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