It started with
one childcare exclusion.
How Born in the Gap began
In early 2026, Saskatchewan's renewed $10/day childcare agreement took effect. Families celebrated. Then one parent got a letter.
Her child — enrolled in kindergarten, attending licensed care — was excluded. Not because the family didn't qualify. Not because of income. Because her child was born in January 2020. Not April. January.
She started asking questions. How much does this cost families? How much does it cost the government long-term? Is this happening in other provinces? What else isn't being counted?
The answers were worse than she expected. And they didn't stop at childcare.
One gap became many.
Pulling on one thread revealed a pattern. Federal programs consistently designed around Canada's largest cities — applied equally to everyone else. The costs that didn't fit the formula got absorbed. By families. By provinces. In silence.
Who We Are
Born in the Gap is a citizen-led initiative built by the people most affected by what happens when government policy draws a line — and families fall on the wrong side of it.
We are parents, workers, and residents of British Columbia, Alberta, Saskatchewan, and Manitoba. We are the provinces that stretch across the centre of this country — often overlooked in federal policy design, underrepresented in national funding conversations, and consistently asked to absorb the cost of decisions made in Ottawa without our voices in the room.
We call ourselves the gap of Canada — not out of bitterness, but because it is accurate. The gap between the coasts is where we live. And for too long, it has also been where our needs disappear.
THe reasons
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Every year, federal and provincial governments introduce bills, regulations, and agreements that reshape how families live — changes to childcare funding, health transfer payments, housing subsidies, energy policy, employment insurance structures, and income support programs.
These decisions are made with data. But the data used to model them rarely reflects the specific realities of prairie families. Cost-of-living calculations anchored to Toronto and Vancouver. Health system modelling built around Ontario wait times. Housing affordability benchmarks drawn from Metro Vancouver.
When policies are designed using the wrong baseline, they produce the wrong outcomes — and the people least likely to be heard are the ones who absorb the difference.
Born in the Gap exists to change that.
We are not a political organization. We do not endorse parties or candidates. We are a civic education and accountability platform with one purpose: to make the real economic cost of policy decisions visible to the people those decisions affect. -
We translate bills into plain language. When a new piece of legislation is introduced, we break down what it actually says — not the press release version, not the talking points — the provision-by-provision reality of what is being proposed.
We model the economic impact on prairie families. Using publicly available Statistics Canada data, Canadian Institute for Health Information reports, and provincial open data, we project what proposed legislation will mean for the cost of housing, healthcare access, employment, energy, and daily life across BC, AB, SK, and MB — side by side, so you can see where the gaps are.
We document what was promised versus what was delivered. For legislation already passed, we track the commitments made during debate and compare them to measurable outcomes over time.
We give you tools to act. Template letters to ministers and opposition members. Riding-level breakdowns of how your MP voted. Signature campaigns tied to specific policy asks. Resources for families navigating the systems these policies created.
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This platform began with one family's experience — and one specific gap in Saskatchewan's $10/day childcare agreement.
In early 2026, the renewed Canada-Wide Early Learning and Child Care agreement took effect with an improved provision: children who turned six while attending kindergarten could continue to receive subsidized care until the end of the school year. It was celebrated as a meaningful win for families.
But children born between January and March 2020 — who were also in kindergarten, who were also attending licensed care — were excluded. Not because the intent of the policy didn't cover them. Because of a calendar technicality that the provincial government declined to address.
That gap cost approximately 3,250 Saskatchewan families — disproportionately led by mothers — an estimated $3,900 to $5,400 per child for the final months of the school year.
The government's position was that this was unavoidable. Our economic analysis showed the cost of exclusion — in lost workforce participation, reduced tax revenue, and increased federal transfer dependency — ran between $13.8 and $27.6 million over two years. More than double the $5.6 million it would have cost to close the gap.
That is what happens when policy is designed without the people it affects in the room.
That is why this site exists.
Thank You
This site exists because one tired parent decided that being angry wasn't enough — that the people affected by these gaps deserved more than frustration. They deserved information.
If you've made it this far, you're probably one of us. Someone who has felt the weight of a policy that didn't account for your life, your distance, your province, your family. Someone who knows that the gap between what was promised and what was delivered is not an accident — it's a pattern.
Thank you for being here. Thank you for reading. Thank you for sharing this with the next person who needs to know they aren't alone in it.
This platform is built and maintained by one person, on the margins of a full-time job and a full-time life. If it has been useful to you — if it gave you language for something you've been feeling, or a number to put behind something you already knew — consider leaving a small contribution. It keeps the lights on and the data current.
Every dollar goes directly toward keeping this resource free, accurate, and available to anyone who needs it.
Contact Us
Born in the Gap is a citizen-led initiative based in Saskatchewan. It is not affiliated with any political party, lobbying organization, or government body.
Have a story to share? If you or your family have been affected by a policy gap in BC, AB, SK, or MB — a childcare exclusion, a housing threshold that didn't fit your market, a health service your community can't access — we want to hear from you. Your experience is data too.
Found an error in our analysis? We are committed to accuracy. If you find a number, citation, or projection that doesn't hold up, please tell us. We will review it and correct it publicly if needed.
Media inquiries? This platform has been built to be cited and shared. If you are a journalist covering prairie policy, childcare, housing, or cost of living, you are welcome to reach out.