Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:OP here. This is what I’m trying to figure out. My daycare follows OSSE guidance, which I think all DC licensed daycares are required to follow. But I can’t easily find those regulations, what applies to daycares vs DCPS. I think my daycare believes they are subject to Mayor’s orders, I just can’t find proof of that online so that I can provide actual language to my daycares administrative team. Again, I am for masking and negative tests, but I’m finding that my daycare is seeming to implement policy when it benefits their narrative and it seems they are cherry-picking what regulations to follow and which to ignore.
Of course they’re going to try to pass the buck. If they acknowledged it was their own policy then they’d be acknowledging that they’re breaking the contract. Probably no one would try to pull their kids of of daycare, but if they did then the parents would almost certainly be able to do so without penalty.
What part of the contract are they breaking by asking that kids test for a contagious disease and stay home if infected?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:OP here. This is what I’m trying to figure out. My daycare follows OSSE guidance, which I think all DC licensed daycares are required to follow. But I can’t easily find those regulations, what applies to daycares vs DCPS. I think my daycare believes they are subject to Mayor’s orders, I just can’t find proof of that online so that I can provide actual language to my daycares administrative team. Again, I am for masking and negative tests, but I’m finding that my daycare is seeming to implement policy when it benefits their narrative and it seems they are cherry-picking what regulations to follow and which to ignore.
You are correct that child care centers need to follow OSSE regs for child development programs, which sometimes differ from DCPS regs for health and safety protocols. Many child care programs choose to follow the lead of DCPS when setting policies (like snow day policies, for example). So it is reasonable for a program to choose to do that. OSSE child care regs generally take longer to change, so I doubt that OSSE has updated them the way DCPS has made this new test to return to school policy.
Is DCPS requiring it, or is OSSE? Does it apply to charger schools? If it does then it's not a DCPS rule.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:OP here. This is what I’m trying to figure out. My daycare follows OSSE guidance, which I think all DC licensed daycares are required to follow. But I can’t easily find those regulations, what applies to daycares vs DCPS. I think my daycare believes they are subject to Mayor’s orders, I just can’t find proof of that online so that I can provide actual language to my daycares administrative team. Again, I am for masking and negative tests, but I’m finding that my daycare is seeming to implement policy when it benefits their narrative and it seems they are cherry-picking what regulations to follow and which to ignore.
You are correct that child care centers need to follow OSSE regs for child development programs, which sometimes differ from DCPS regs for health and safety protocols. Many child care programs choose to follow the lead of DCPS when setting policies (like snow day policies, for example). So it is reasonable for a program to choose to do that. OSSE child care regs generally take longer to change, so I doubt that OSSE has updated them the way DCPS has made this new test to return to school policy.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:OP here. This is what I’m trying to figure out. My daycare follows OSSE guidance, which I think all DC licensed daycares are required to follow. But I can’t easily find those regulations, what applies to daycares vs DCPS. I think my daycare believes they are subject to Mayor’s orders, I just can’t find proof of that online so that I can provide actual language to my daycares administrative team. Again, I am for masking and negative tests, but I’m finding that my daycare is seeming to implement policy when it benefits their narrative and it seems they are cherry-picking what regulations to follow and which to ignore.
Of course they’re going to try to pass the buck. If they acknowledged it was their own policy then they’d be acknowledging that they’re breaking the contract. Probably no one would try to pull their kids of of daycare, but if they did then the parents would almost certainly be able to do so without penalty.
Anonymous wrote:I don't mind our LO's private daycare required all kids to submit a negative PCR test (not rapid test) before coming back on January 3rd.I am taking my family to get PCR test today even we have no known exposure/risk/travel and daycare not requesting it. Most kids are unvaccinated under 5 at our daycare.
Anonymous wrote:OP here. This is what I’m trying to figure out. My daycare follows OSSE guidance, which I think all DC licensed daycares are required to follow. But I can’t easily find those regulations, what applies to daycares vs DCPS. I think my daycare believes they are subject to Mayor’s orders, I just can’t find proof of that online so that I can provide actual language to my daycares administrative team. Again, I am for masking and negative tests, but I’m finding that my daycare is seeming to implement policy when it benefits their narrative and it seems they are cherry-picking what regulations to follow and which to ignore.
Anonymous wrote:OP here. This is what I’m trying to figure out. My daycare follows OSSE guidance, which I think all DC licensed daycares are required to follow. But I can’t easily find those regulations, what applies to daycares vs DCPS. I think my daycare believes they are subject to Mayor’s orders, I just can’t find proof of that online so that I can provide actual language to my daycares administrative team. Again, I am for masking and negative tests, but I’m finding that my daycare is seeming to implement policy when it benefits their narrative and it seems they are cherry-picking what regulations to follow and which to ignore.
Anonymous wrote:All daycares are subject to health and safety regulations.