My kids are old enough to stay home, but I agree with you wholeheartedly. For many parents, the "back up plan" is actually the school-based provider, which up until this year was a reliable source of back-up care. I used to keep my kids in one day a week of aftercare just to access the "drop in" option for days when schools were delayed, for example. This meant that the provider opened at 8:30 rather than 6:30, for example, still allowing me to make almost a full day of work. But this year, the policy changed so that school-based providers weren't allowed to open until the school itself did, which in some cases meant not until after 11 am. I feel like some of the folks on this thread are arguing without understanding that the school-based provider WAS the back-up plan, and it was a plan that worked until the very recent past. |
| Why this became a thread about providers opening? |
You mean whether MCPS allows them to open? Because it speaks to Thomas Taylor's poor judgement and that is relevant to the fact that MCPS is complete sh$t sh0w right now. |
If MCPS buildings are closed due to safety it’s bad judgement to open child care. |
You need to consider if the roads are clear for the minimum workers and overall safety for everyone. You still need a back up plan to facility based care. That is not the kind of back up we are talking about. |
I am one of the other PPs above. We already discussed that every parent has a backup plan. It's usually missing work. You keep repeating this line about "backup plans" as though there is some shadow workforce of women who live next door to all the young kids that are willing and able to care for other people's children at a moment's notice. Gmafb |
Then, like the rest of us you make up the hours or have a friend or neighbor or paid help watch the kids. If you were kind to people they’d probably help you out if you help them out at other times. When mine were little we’d rotate who’d take off with a bunch of families. |
Then at least let them open when the high schools open. |
Please explain how the roads can be clear for high school employees (and the facilities and bus service workers who have to start hours before), but not child care staff working out of elementary schools. |
That's too late for teachers to get to work. Let them open unless county government is closed. They can decide not to open if they feel it is unsafe. |
Decreasing birth rates mean you probably don't live next to people with similarly aged kids. I don't. |
Open with high schools means open when the high schools would be expected to be staffed. That's 30-60 minutes before the bell. |
It shouldn't be about when schools open. School closure/delay decisions are made based on the need for buses to navigate residential streets. You shouldn't force child care shutdowns based on that standard. |
Because the 75 page thread about this was locked before these same posters were able to full disgorge their frustrations so every MCPS thread is in danger being about their childcare issues and disdain for SAHPs. Meanwhile the post about actual mold in MCPS schools (not my thread for those ready to pounce) got three responses. Go figure. |
Mold isn't the problem some people like to claim it to be. Depending on the type of mold, its effects are similar to pollen. If your biggest problem in MCPS is mold, things are going spectacularly well for you. |