Fonds 2008 - Campus Community Cooperative Day Care Centre fonds

Identity area

Reference code

UTA 2008

Title

Campus Community Cooperative Day Care Centre fonds

Date(s)

  • 1963-[20--?], predominant 1969-1977 (Creation)

Level of description

Fonds

Extent and medium

0.2 m of textual records

Context area

Name of creator

(1969-)

Administrative history

The Campus Community Cooperative Day Care Centre (CCCDCC) is an organization that provides day care for the children of students, faculty and staff at the University of Toronto St. George campus and for the surrounding community.

The CCCDCC opened its doors on September 22, 1969. The first day care centre to operate at the University of Toronto, it paved the way for the eventual establishment of accessible and affordable child care on campus, providing students and working parents with the necessary supports to pursue their education and career. Their focus on infant care was pioneering. The centre was one of the first in a growing movement towards parent- and community-run child care, formed by a grassroots co-operative group of parents, students and volunteers at a time when the concept of child care for all was in its infancy and still carried the connotation of being only for at-risk children and families.

In the Spring of 1969 a group of feminists from The Women’s Liberation Movement – Toronto distributed a leaflet on campus to gauge interest and enlist participants in a cooperative day care facility. Their goal was to achieve “accessible, high-quality, affordable early learning and child care” for the University of Toronto community[1]. At this time the university assumed no responsibility for child care. The leafleting and a simultaneous letter writing campaign resulted in 40 registrations and thus the CCCDCC was born. With term time approaching the group focussed on material needs, primarily the search for a location in which to house a day care facility. Requests to the university for space were unsuccessful. Eventually the group took matters into their own hands and occupied 12 Sussex Avenue, an unused building belonging to the University of Toronto from which the day care began operations.

The early years of the CCCDCC’s existence involved ongoing activism and advocacy to get the support they needed from the University of Toronto to operate and subsequently expand. Their activities garnered considerable attention from the media including special editions of The Varsity devoted to their cause [2]. There was also front-page coverage in newspapers like The Globe and Mail and the Toronto Star. The CCCDCC’s commitment to parent involvement, early childhood education, the cooperative movement, feminism, collective decision making, alternative approaches to family structures and childrearing were seen as ‘counter-culture’ and set them at odds with both the university administration of the time and the provincial government’s day care branch. As observed by Lisa Pasolli, the co-op was “…part of a much bigger story of the feminist and New Left movements of the late 1960s, one devoted to challenging the constraints of the nuclear family and undoing sexist child-rearing.”[3]

The founding members of the CCCDCC came from the university’s student and staff population and included, amongst others: Sarah Spinks, Kathryn Petersen, Dr. Lorenne Smith and John Foster (the donor of the records in accession B2021-0002). Other key individuals, such as Julie Mathien, went on to play important roles in education and child care advocacy through work with groups like The Daycare Organizing Committee and the Toronto Board of Education. The membership changed regularly in this period and consisted of various parents, supporters and volunteers in addition to two paid co-ordinators hired to help run the centre. The importance of volunteer time and energy in establishing, organizing, and running the CCCDCC cannot be overstated. Volunteer roles ranged from daily duties supplementing the staff (cooking, diapers, playing, etc.) to committee work, advocacy and a variety of other responsibilities.

The CCCDCC’s activism is demonstrated by two key events. The first was a rally on March 25, 1970 to demand guaranteed, rent-free space and a commitment to building renovations that would enable them to meet and pass the licensing requirements of Ontario’s Day Nurseries Act. The rally met at Sidney Smith and was followed by a march to Simcoe Hall. The subsequent sit-in (the University of Toronto’s first) lasted 22 hours, ending the following morning when University of Toronto President Claude Bissell made an announcement guaranteeing funds for renovation (though the university still did not assume any responsibility for university-provided childcare). The second major event took place in April 1972 when members of the CCCDCC occupied an empty club house on Devonshire Place to create a day care for over 2s (the ‘graduates’ of the Sussex daycare). They maintained 24/7 occupation of the space for a full year.

After the mid-70s the CCCDCC stepped back from the front lines of advocacy and activism but has continued to provide child care for the University of Toronto community from various locations on campus. They celebrated their 50th anniversary in 2019. For more information see The Campus Community Coop Daycare website.


Notes
[1] Mathien, J. (2021). Struggles and sit-ins: The early years of Campus Community Co-operative Day Care Centre and child care in Canada. Childcare Resource and Research Unit. Page 54. Accessed at childcarecanada.org
[2] The Varsity, Volume 90 – No. 62, March 25, 1970 ; The Varsity, Volume 90 – No. 61, March 26, 1970
[3] Pasolli, L. (2021). “Creating universal child care from the ground up: The legacy of Toronto's grassroots child care advocacy,” Childcare Resource and Research Unit blog

Name of creator

(1942-)

Biographical history

John Foster, Sessional Lecturer in International Studies and Justice Studies at the University of Regina, formerly in interdisciplinary studies, Carleton University, completed his graduate studies at the University of Toronto in the late 1960s (M.A., 1973, Ph.D. 1977).

Archival history

Records in accession B2021-0002 were created and accumulated by John Foster in the course of his activities with the CCCDCC and were stored at his home. Foster was a graduate student and lecturer at UofT in the early 1970s, his partner worked for the Student Administrative Council (SAC) and their child attended the daycare. Foster volunteered in various capacities with the CCCDCC including as treasurer. Foster and another key member of the collective, Julie Mathien, participated in the UTARMS Student Activism Oral Histories Project, describing their experiences with the CCCDCC. The records in B2021-0002 had been loaned by Foster to Julie Mathien for research purposes and were subsequently donated to the archives. This accession may also include some records accumulated by another founding member, Kathryn Petersen.

Immediate source of acquisition or transfer

Content and structure area

Scope and content

Fonds contains records created and accumulated by one of the founding members of the CCCDCC, John Foster, and predominantly consists of materials documenting the formative years of the cooperative, with particular focus on the events of 1970 and 1972. The records reflect the sometimes adversarial relationship with university administration and the province during those years and demonstrate ongoing negotiation with those two groups. Included are records documenting CCCDCC’s goals and philosophy and the challenges of combining political ideals with the day-to-day operation of a child care facility. Also included are materials that situate the CCCDCC as part of a larger movement towards co-operative organization, early childhood education in Canada and the U.S. and other movements of the period. There are also records related to other Toronto groups providing child care such as The St. Andrew’s University Day Nursery.

Records include correspondence, committee documentation, financial records, research materials, newsletters, fact sheets, membership lists, educational materials, ephemera, publications and clippings of media coverage.

See series descriptions for additional information.

Appraisal, destruction and scheduling

Accruals

System of arrangement

Conditions of access and use area

Conditions governing access

Some files in Series 1 are restricted. Consult University Archivist for permission.

  • Series 1: B2021-0002/001(02), (05), (07)

Conditions governing reproduction

Language of material

    Script of material

      Language and script notes

      Physical characteristics and technical requirements

      Finding aids

      Finding aid is linked below

      Allied materials area

      Existence and location of originals

      Existence and location of copies

      Related units of description

      Canadian Women's Movement Archives (CWMA) fonds contains materials relating to both the Toronto Women’s Liberation Movement and the CCCDCC
      Rise Up! A digital archive of feminist activism contains other editions of “Day Care for Everyone!”
      Women Unite! contains chapter “Sussex Day Care”

      Notes area

      Alternative identifier(s)

      Accession

      B2021-0002

      Access points

      Subject access points

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      Description control area

      Description identifier

      Institution identifier

      Rules and/or conventions used

      Dates of creation revision deletion

      Original finding aid by Louise Curtis, 2022; Entered into Atom by Louise Curtis, 9 March 2022.

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          Accession area