Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I'm a parent and I have a love/hate relationship with the inspections. My inhome rushes and tries so hard to get all her paperwork correct and they always bust her for tiny things (like a missing signature or my shot record was 7 months old and it needs updated every 6 months). Tiny things should be on a different scale than letting a sex offender live in the house or ratio is too high.
I'd like to think parents are savvy enough to recognize the difference though. I definitely did not give as much weight to "paperwork" violations compared to other things.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I'm a parent and I have a love/hate relationship with the inspections. My inhome rushes and tries so hard to get all her paperwork correct and they always bust her for tiny things (like a missing signature or my shot record was 7 months old and it needs updated every 6 months). Tiny things should be on a different scale than letting a sex offender live in the house or ratio is too high.
I'd like to think parents are savvy enough to recognize the difference though. I definitely did not give as much weight to "paperwork" violations compared to other things.
Anonymous wrote:I'm a parent and I have a love/hate relationship with the inspections. My inhome rushes and tries so hard to get all her paperwork correct and they always bust her for tiny things (like a missing signature or my shot record was 7 months old and it needs updated every 6 months). Tiny things should be on a different scale than letting a sex offender live in the house or ratio is too high.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Part of having an open door policy is that parents act as inspectors too. If you know something is wrong, you have the ability to report and the option to pull your child.
+1. However, I can see WHY parents might be hesitant to do this, because it is not always so easy to find another place (and reporting them doesn't just affect YOUR child, it affects all the other families too). I'd try talking to your daycare provider first. We once had an issue with a provider leaving the door unlocked (basement entrance) when she knew parents were going to be arriving in the morning because she was usually attending to the other kids. No idea if it had anything to do with inspection timing but pretty sure that is against the rules. Although I knew the chance of something happening was small, it made me uncomfortable. She listened and started keeping it locked at all times.
Anonymous wrote:Part of having an open door policy is that parents act as inspectors too. If you know something is wrong, you have the ability to report and the option to pull your child.
Anonymous wrote:Can you provide examples?