Anonymous wrote:Our daycare has yet to publish any new guidelines, but they do seem to be being flexible on an ad-hoc basis (in terms of out-of-school exposure or parent cases). But we still haven't had many cases, and our last closure was in January during Omicron.
I do think they are likely to shut down a classroom for 10 days if there is a case in the room, though. I guess we'll probably eventually find out. Has CDC flowed new guidance that suggests they shouldn't? I don't think so.
I am most angry that these restrictions/policies come with no support, like paid parental leave. It is fine for me, but not for everyone.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Although it hasn't affected my DS' classroom yet, we just got notified about an outbreak at our center, largely affecting the pre-K rooms. Of the families we know in those rooms, all have had their kids vaccinated if eligible, and most kids/teachers still mask even though it is not technically required.I think this variant is just really contagious.
Well that just makes it worse. If one Covid case can shut down a classroom and more and more people are catching it, then it’s possible to go weeks without childcare. Say when the two weeks are up and they go back and a kid reports a Covid case and “exposes” the other kids, can’t the whole cycle just start again? How is that sustainable.
Yeah it would be better in a way for everyone to just get it at once than piecemeal.
Anonymous wrote:Although it hasn't affected my DS' classroom yet, we just got notified about an outbreak at our center, largely affecting the pre-K rooms. Of the families we know in those rooms, all have had their kids vaccinated if eligible, and most kids/teachers still mask even though it is not technically required.I think this variant is just really contagious.
Well that just makes it worse. If one Covid case can shut down a classroom and more and more people are catching it, then it’s possible to go weeks without childcare. Say when the two weeks are up and they go back and a kid reports a Covid case and “exposes” the other kids, can’t the whole cycle just start again? How is that sustainable.
Anonymous wrote:Both of my children's daycare/preschool classrooms were completely shut down this week because of two separate covid cases. I will have two weeks of juggling childcare and work and no compensation for the closure.
WHY are we still doing this. Why has every segment of society essentially returned to normal except daycares? I understand that small children cannot get a vaccine but its been proven time and again that small children are not seriously affected by Covid. I have accepted that this is endemic, but why have daycares not.
What is your daycare's policy? Are they all living like this is 2020?