Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I WFH sometimes and believe me, I never WANT my toddler to be home from daycare.
Agree the norm should be to have childcare coverage during working hours.
When there are multiple young children in daycare just please be aware that sick days are frequent, especially if one kid is an infant getting illnesses for the first time. So the employee in question may not have much choice, and you may actually be getting more work out of them if the choice is WFH day vs. sick day with no work.
I’d rather they take a sick day.
Anonymous wrote:I WFH sometimes and believe me, I never WANT my toddler to be home from daycare.
Agree the norm should be to have childcare coverage during working hours.
When there are multiple young children in daycare just please be aware that sick days are frequent, especially if one kid is an infant getting illnesses for the first time. So the employee in question may not have much choice, and you may actually be getting more work out of them if the choice is WFH day vs. sick day with no work.
Anonymous wrote:I have children who are older (college up). Am I the only one who gets annoyed when I'm on a call with a wfh person and the baby or toddler is ok their lap fussing or crying? And you're trying to have a work meeting?
May be unpopular opinion but I think wfh people should still have sitters or daycare or help. But then they whine about the cost. I get it. But Hou had to pay for this prior to covid! And now you save on not having to commute but yet you're too broke for childcare?
I think childcare should be mandatory for wfh up until maybe the age that kids are legally allowed to stay home alone. Age 10? Not sure.
I'm sure I'll get hate. But curious of other people's thoughts.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I WFH sometimes and believe me, I never WANT my toddler to be home from daycare.
Agree the norm should be to have childcare coverage during working hours.
When there are multiple young children in daycare just please be aware that sick days are frequent, especially if one kid is an infant getting illnesses for the first time. So the employee in question may not have much choice, and you may actually be getting more work out of them if the choice is WFH day vs. sick day with no work.
Yea but before covid and the advent of WFH these days were far fewer. Clearly lots of mothers are taking advantage.
Anonymous wrote:I WFH sometimes and believe me, I never WANT my toddler to be home from daycare.
Agree the norm should be to have childcare coverage during working hours.
When there are multiple young children in daycare just please be aware that sick days are frequent, especially if one kid is an infant getting illnesses for the first time. So the employee in question may not have much choice, and you may actually be getting more work out of them if the choice is WFH day vs. sick day with no work.
Anonymous wrote:My employer requires childcare for kids. I think it's perfectly reasonable, and pay for it.
There is the occasional instance where a kid will be home sick (fever, vomiting etc) and I'll take leave, but I have ONE meeting with one or more people who are super busy and I know it will take months to reschedule...in those circumstances, I try to get the kid to sleep or quietly watching TV so I can call in. I do explain the situation if there's an interruption, but sometimes canceling is the worse option.