Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Swimming is a life skill. The Downcounty ES should find a way to benefit from this too.
There is a pool in Takoma park, MLK, silver spring and glenmont. They can bus the kids.
Anonymous wrote:And why are they spending money on building early childhood centers? Pre-K can be operated by high quality child care providers at lower cost and is much more convenient for working families. And the more Pre-K classes there are in schools, the more it destabilizes the child care market and leads to higher prices for families and child care program closures. It's one thing to go ahead with it despite that if you actually have the classroom space available. But it's just stupid to spend tens of millions of dollars on facilities cost for something that's not necessary and is arguably harmful to the county.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:And why are they spending money on building early childhood centers? Pre-K can be operated by high quality child care providers at lower cost and is much more convenient for working families. And the more Pre-K classes there are in schools, the more it destabilizes the child care market and leads to higher prices for families and child care program closures. It's one thing to go ahead with it despite that if you actually have the classroom space available. But it's just stupid to spend tens of millions of dollars on facilities cost for something that's not necessary and is arguably harmful to the county.
There is not a lot of affordable child care. This is good.
Building school district early childhood centers doesn't increase the amount of affordable child care (especially for families who need care for longer than the standard school day), it worsens affordable child care by pulling kids out of neighboring child care programs and destabilizing them and causing them to raise prices for the remaining families or go out of business. If you want to improve affordable child care, those millions of dollars could go way further by just subsidizing child care to make it cheaper.
Not al all. And it’s probably for lower income families.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Swimming is a life skill. The Downcounty ES should find a way to benefit from this too.
There is a pool in Takoma park, MLK, silver spring and glenmont. They can bus the kids.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:And why are they spending money on building early childhood centers? Pre-K can be operated by high quality child care providers at lower cost and is much more convenient for working families. And the more Pre-K classes there are in schools, the more it destabilizes the child care market and leads to higher prices for families and child care program closures. It's one thing to go ahead with it despite that if you actually have the classroom space available. But it's just stupid to spend tens of millions of dollars on facilities cost for something that's not necessary and is arguably harmful to the county.
There is not a lot of affordable child care. This is good.
Building school district early childhood centers doesn't increase the amount of affordable child care (especially for families who need care for longer than the standard school day), it worsens affordable child care by pulling kids out of neighboring child care programs and destabilizing them and causing them to raise prices for the remaining families or go out of business. If you want to improve affordable child care, those millions of dollars could go way further by just subsidizing child care to make it cheaper.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:And why are they spending money on building early childhood centers? Pre-K can be operated by high quality child care providers at lower cost and is much more convenient for working families. And the more Pre-K classes there are in schools, the more it destabilizes the child care market and leads to higher prices for families and child care program closures. It's one thing to go ahead with it despite that if you actually have the classroom space available. But it's just stupid to spend tens of millions of dollars on facilities cost for something that's not necessary and is arguably harmful to the county.
There is not a lot of affordable child care. This is good.
Anonymous wrote:And why are they spending money on building early childhood centers? Pre-K can be operated by high quality child care providers at lower cost and is much more convenient for working families. And the more Pre-K classes there are in schools, the more it destabilizes the child care market and leads to higher prices for families and child care program closures. It's one thing to go ahead with it despite that if you actually have the classroom space available. But it's just stupid to spend tens of millions of dollars on facilities cost for something that's not necessary and is arguably harmful to the county.
Anonymous wrote:Swimming is a life skill. The Downcounty ES should find a way to benefit from this too.
Anonymous wrote:Swimming is a life skill. The Downcounty ES should find a way to benefit from this too.
Anonymous wrote:Why would he do that? It makes no sense. The county runs pools.