PRESS RELEASE
Just a few
days before the European Commission published its (hopefully) first package on
the Social Pillar of the European Union, parents from
18 different European countries gathered in Paphos, Cyprus for the conference
of EPA (European Parents’ Association) on
‘A More Socially Just Europe for Children and Parents?!’ on 22-24 April. The
event was the opportunity to launch a major EPA position paper on The Best Interest of the Young Child, and participants also built their
vision of a socially just Europe in interactive plenary and workshop sessions.
The Best
Interest of the Young Child paper on early childhood education needs and
provisions from a parents’ perspective is a result of a Europe-wide
consultation and based on the widest possible consensus of national parents’
association from Nordic to Southern countries.
According
to the paper “a good start in life is crucial for well-being, and is also
crucial not only for physical, but also for social, emotional and cognitive
development in later ages. A good start is best provided by parents in
the framework of the home and the family. Part of this good start is
the education and care provided by parents, the starting point of
lifelong learning that will not end before the end of your life. When defining
early childhood education and care needs, designing provisions and allocating
budget, the guiding principles must be the best interest of the
child and the right of the parents to decide how they want to educate and care
for their children – being their primary educators – having this best
interest as a superior principle.”
The primary
demand of parents’ associations is that parents must be given freedom
to make decisions for their children and these decisions should not
be restricted by any financial constraints or legislative measures. It is
important that governments and the EU understand diversity and adapt systems to
that. It needs high level commitment to provisions and also the systematic
application of the principle of subsidiarity. It should also be a principle to
give space for the voice of children in a balanced way to ensure parents'
rights at the same time.
Parents’
association representatives gathered in Paphos also defined what a social
package should include in a country or in a Europe that fulfils its obligations
towards children and their families as regulated in the UN Convention on the
Rights of the Child. The general wish is to cease seeking equal opportunities
approaches and replace them by equitable measures to support upward mobility
and social justice. The participants highlighted four areas, in-kind support
and shelter, financial provisions and social security, health care, and
training for parents.
Keeping in
mind the principle that children must not be taken away from the family for
financial reasons only, there should be free shelter for families in need, so
that they can stay together as a family. It has also proven to be helpful to
provide starter packages for families with children at an important milestone
in their lives, eg. for newborns, those starting school or leaving school. To
ensure the right to education it would be necessary to ensure a free option of
education as stated in the Charter of Fundamental Rights of the European Union.
According to a 2015 survey by EPA there is no country in Europe where there is
such a free option, parents must pay for certain services or compulsory
accessories. School books, stationery and free public transport should be
available as well as cheap starter computers and internet access for a 21st
century education. Necessary medication and vaccines should also be available
for all families, free for those in need, so that no child’s health is
endangered by financial constraints.
In the
field of financial provisions, parents’ associations strongly support basic
income for all. It is also a demand to go back to the discarded Maternity Leave
Directive and make a minimum of 1 year of flexible, fully paid parental leave
available for everybody in Europe. It is also important to ensure sick leave
for parents for times of their children’s illnesses.
To ensure
well-being, health is an important factor. Free health care should be provided
to all children, including unborn ones, meaning free prenatal care for pregnant
mothers. Free health care for children must include medication, dentist and
necessary orthodontics, glasses and other medical aids. There should be an
annual payment ceiling for all for prescription medicine. Those with special
dietary needs should also have access to subsidised products.
To support
parents in their decision making for their children and in their job as primary
educators, governments and the European Union should support the sharing of
information and knowledge on good parenting, offer financial provisions for
parents’ training, especially peer training, rather than training provided by
others. It should start during pregnancy, when parental training should be as
wide-spread as medical preparatory classes. It is important to ensure training
and information relevant to the age of children to get the most important
messages reach parents.
In the
Social Pillar package published by the European Commission there are some
elements that sound promising as a starting point to build a more socially just
Europe, especially for the future, our children. It is the hope of parents’
associations in Europe that it is only a first in a series of packages and the
forthcoming ones will focus more on the people rather than the needs of the
labour market and trade unions. Parents’ associations and EPA being their
umbrella organisation are ready to support the creation of further elements of
the Pillar, especially to make sure that after putting the plastering on it
missing building bricks will not result in its collapse.
Press contact: Eszter Salamon, President president@euparents.eu
No comments:
Post a Comment