And what about the working parents staffing those medical offices? Screw them? |
Not the prior poster (my road still hasn't been plowed) but arguing that hospitals should go in strike because the mcps school administration won't open schools is crazy work. |
Child care providing transportation to and from school, which is what you need the rest of the time, is not easy to come by. Particularly depending on what part of the county you're in and what kind of needs your kids have. |
How do you expect working parents to staff those hospitals if MCPS won't let child care open? |
| Prepare now because the next storm does seem higher confidence. Getting my backup childcare ready because it is doable |
The "policy change" was prohibiting child care providers from opening. Historically MCPS made an effort to allow them open. Taylor changed that. |
Ffs Parents who work in healthcare accept that their job is essential and they might have to figure out transportation to work in terrible weather conditions. Health care workers often camp out at the hospital during a blizzard or hurricane. |
That number is flagged for originating SPAM calls... |
I just registerred it on Google Voice this evening. I'll look into that |
+1 The data show that. My kids are past the aftercare years, but that was a big reason people signed up for before/after care. Because you need it for snow weeks like this one. |
Oh yes, I'm sure the receptionist or med tech at the clinic or surgery center is paid enough to hire a nanny so that MCPS closing child care doesn't screw them over. Just fess up that you don't care about the working parents providing you services. |
Our hospital has been closed. They aren’t sure about tomorrow. |
Parents are selfish. Take off time for your health. |
They have to use others as talking points. |
Ahh, that's probably why. Those numbers get recycled. |