This is why your crowd (the restriction/mandate crowd) isn't taken seriously. You think that because you have a WFH/SAHM situation, everybody else should just suck it up and align with you. Your crowd has been a bunch of selfish clowns from day one. And thankfully, leadership has finally tuned you out. Which is why we have all the whining and wailing on this board now. |
Yes, and that is the reality for many kids. |
These kinds of comments used to make me mad. Then I realized they should just evoke pity in the writer. |
You're still rolling out lines from 2020? (and they weren't even clever then...) |
It has nothing to do with WFH/SAHM situation. If your kids are in care for 12 hours a day and neither parents cannot work out a more reasonable schedule, then why have kids? |
You're absolutely hopeless and completely irredeemable. |
FFS, can we please stop lumping WFH and SAH together? Please? Those of us who work from home are WORKING (except when they take days off). The WFH families we know, ours included, do use before and/or aftercare because, again, we're WORKING and no, we can't all magically stagger our hours every day to fit neatly in the six hour box MCPS grants us, never mind the random days off, half days, etc. Jesus, people. |
Okay, fair enough. I agree with you. WFH had it "slightly" easier last year because at least the childcare was technically covered, but the educational experience was still a complete disaster because of the need to focus on work. |
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Stop feeding the troll people. We've been arguing about child care for decades.
The current recommendation is to wear masks indoors. If your child can wear an N95, KN95 or other good respirator properly (IMO children under 7 cannot wear these properly), then my personal opinion is they probably should as cases are very high. But it's optional, and frankly if someone doesn't want to do it I can't force it and MCPS can't force it even if there was a an unenforceable mandate in place. |
They don't care about the current recommendation and will think nothing of sending their kids to school sick as they cannot take off to care for them. That is where we are at now. Even a cloth mask is better than nothing. |
I'm one of the PPs who mentioned before/aftercare. I never said my kid was in care for 12 hours a day- where did you get that? But yes it's on the order of 8.5-9 hours total, which is a large portion of the day when they sleep for another 10 hours. Again, you can mask your kid as hard and for as long as you want, I really don't care. (You know who whose kids were sometimes in care for 12 hours per day at one point- my neighbors' who were both working in hospitals throughout the pandemic. Wouldn't hurt to think a little bit before you spout off next time) |
I mean people on these boards were losing their minds about the lady that proudly wore a mesh mask. I'm not a fan of hers but an airborne virus goes through cloth just like it goes through mesh. |
LOL - if by "technically covered" you mean "CPS probably won't be called," then sure. I mean, how do you think the work experience was for those parents expected to work AND supervise distance learning at the same goddamn time? Avoiding COVID exposure is great. Also, two years of chronic stress from being expected to do two full-time jobs at once is no picnic, PP. |
Well it was also a complete disaster because staring at a screen for hours per day is not effective way to learn for many kids (or even advised), |
You can easily hire an after school babysitter. Problem solved. Yes, my kids always mask but they are decent people who understand the impact covid can have on others. You do realize it will be much harder on you if you have to take a week off work because your kids got sick vs. a simple thing like masking. Or, worse, a few weeks off because it cycles through the house at differ times. Or, is your plan to send in your kids sick and not care about the impact it has on others. |