One of the major benefits of doing backup daycare is so you have it for weeks like this one. They would prioritize the enrolled families first. Our Bar-T program is usually full, so unless they have ways for staffing up, I doubt they would take more kids. |
You're the one seeking special treatment. Other people are expected to work. But you claim you can't possibly be expected to shovel your car out. |
What do you mean "easier" and what do you mean "make that happen"? All they have to do is say "You are not banned from opening today-- if your school is plowed and you have the staff available, go for it!". Why does it matter how many schools there are? |
That wasn't me. I'm the one who's been shoveling sidewalks |
Why do you just accept this level of incompetence from a public, taxpayer-funded institution? |
DP. I’m a teacher. It took 3 weeks of phone calls and emails to get all of my cancer-related appointments on the same day so that I would minimize how many sub days my kids had. The glee of a parent at the idea of anyone’s medical appointments being canceled is making me seriously think about how I bend over backwards in this job. |
| This same fight happens every time it snows. You know it is going to snow at some point. You know that MCPS is going to close. You know you have kids and a job to go to. Yet, your solution is to blame teachers and say that MCPS hates working parents. If you have a job than you need to go to even when it snows, you need to have a plan in place. You need to plan for this. It is going to happen every year. This is not a MCPS problem. You did not plan on what you are going to do for your kids when you have to work and schools are closed. |
THERE IS NOT OTHER CHILDCARE. And even if there was, it would not be justifiable for MCPS to mess with the operations and profitability of these childcare businesses, the services working parents paid for, and the income of child care workers for no good reason. |
IOW, you failed to think through your brainwave. Did you really think it was a good idea? |
Of course there is, that's just a silly thing to say. |
We did plan for it. We paid a lot of money for onsite childcare which for the last freaking decade has been a reliable plan for snow day care once the worst day or two are past. Then Taylor flushed our plans down the toilet for no good reason, and folks here are telling us we should just smile and say "Thank you MCPS, you are so wise and we must never question you!" |
[twitter]
Respectfully, this feels like a lot of words to say “I want MCPS to prioritize my childcare needs over its own operations.” School-based childcare is school-based. If MCPS is closed, it’s not wild that programs housed in MCPS buildings are also closed. Calling that “anti-working parent” is a stretch. Snow days have existed forever, and families who rely on school calendars know closures ripple. You can argue the policy should change, but framing it as some moral failing by central office staff for taking snow days is a bit much. Not every inconvenience is an injustice. Also, if independence from MCPS decisions is the goal, that’s exactly what non-school-based childcare already offers. |
People keep saying this but then not providing examples. Just because you are rich enough for jammies doesn't mean ordinary families are. |
DP Are you really pretending that MCPS has always closed administrative offices this often? Gmafb |
Why did letting childcares open on (some) snow days work perfectly well for MCPS operations for years and years, but now all of a sudden asking for things to just stay the way they've always been id "prioritizing childcare needs over MCPS operations"? |