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Preschool and Daycare Discussion
Reply to "Daycares taking advantage of COVID"
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[quote=Anonymous][quote=Anonymous][quote=Anonymous][quote=Anonymous][quote=Anonymous][quote=Anonymous][quote=Anonymous][quote=Anonymous]I don’t know if it’s denial or what but it’s always funny to me that parents say their kids have “allergies”. And it’s always funny to me how these allergies then spread to all of the other kids! then miraculously, allergies disappear after a couple of weeks. It’s also funny how these allergies are never documented by a doctor, or medicated by parents. If by sending one child home for a runny nose it helps prevent an entire classroom closure then that’s what needs to happen.[/quote] Sounds like you hate working moms. [/quote] Working or not, your kids are your responsibility, especially when sick. Working Dad can also stay home.[/quote] So then why do daycares exist? Because based on what you just said one parent always needs to be at home. [/quote] Daycares don’t exist to take care of sick kids. [/quote] There are a couple of issues at play here. First, many families do not have sick leave at work and do not have people who can cover for them. They often have no choice. But also, everyone has limits. If you quarantine whole classes for 10 days, do you think the parents will be able to take a day or 2 off the next month just in case the symptoms that look like allergies are not? If you want to stop diseases from spreading families have to keep kids home at the beginning of an illness, not after they stop being infectious but still have a lingering cough or runny nose. Having draconian policies on keeping kids home does not help, it just means I will send my kid in as long as I can get away with it so that I can keep my job.[/quote] Covid is now something parents need to plan for. Do you have sick leave? Do you have annual leave? Are you married? Why can't your spouse also take off. Most people in professional jobs get 2-4 weeks of leave, so multiple that by two parents and it should get you through. It just means sacrifices like skipping vacations. But, if you can afford a vacation you can afford to pay someone to care for your sick kids too.[/quote] I don't think you understand. We are talking more than 4 weeks a year. My child's day care has been officially closed for outbreaks 4 weeks in the last year. However, my child has been kept home for non-covid symptoms or illnesses A LOT more than that - at least a week every month. I'm lucky I have been able to work remotely so I can get some hours in during naps and at night, because even splitting with my spouse, I think people really, really are running up against the limits of leave and workplace flexibility at this point. That's a real thing. [/quote]
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