Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:This doesn't give a lot of information. Some of those centers probably were struggling and were going to go under regardless. And, many got federal funds and parents like previous posters are fully paying to keep their spot (which may not be there when they want it) so where is that money going. What concerned me was all the positive cases and how many chemicals they were spraying onto surfaces to disinfect and how much of that get injected by kids.
And they are just using typical cleaning products they would use any way. If it weren’t for mass hysteria parents like you that thought that covid posed an outsized danger in day care centers when all evidence shows that it clearly doesn’t when basic safety measures are taken like mask wearing from adults, limiting or eliminating parents and non-staff from entering the center, and increasing hand washing, then they would not be adopting these completely unnecessary and scientifically unsupported “deep cleaning” practices. They are a waste of resources and all for show. You, lady, are part of the problem and have no idea what you are talking about.
NP. Certainly sympathetic with the plight that many daycares now face, particularly small ones, but our daycare has followed every precaution you mentioned and then some (masks, pods, no parents inside, frequent toy cleaning, etc.), and still had two confirmed cases of Covid. To put it another way, “You are part of the problem and have no idea what you are talking about.”
Two kids in the same class where one caught if from another? Or two cases that weren’t related (and may have been contracted elsewhere?).
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:This doesn't give a lot of information. Some of those centers probably were struggling and were going to go under regardless. And, many got federal funds and parents like previous posters are fully paying to keep their spot (which may not be there when they want it) so where is that money going. What concerned me was all the positive cases and how many chemicals they were spraying onto surfaces to disinfect and how much of that get injected by kids.
And they are just using typical cleaning products they would use any way. If it weren’t for mass hysteria parents like you that thought that covid posed an outsized danger in day care centers when all evidence shows that it clearly doesn’t when basic safety measures are taken like mask wearing from adults, limiting or eliminating parents and non-staff from entering the center, and increasing hand washing, then they would not be adopting these completely unnecessary and scientifically unsupported “deep cleaning” practices. They are a waste of resources and all for show. You, lady, are part of the problem and have no idea what you are talking about.
NP. Certainly sympathetic with the plight that many daycares now face, particularly small ones, but our daycare has followed every precaution you mentioned and then some (masks, pods, no parents inside, frequent toy cleaning, etc.), and still had two confirmed cases of Covid. To put it another way, “You are part of the problem and have no idea what you are talking about.”
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:This doesn't give a lot of information. Some of those centers probably were struggling and were going to go under regardless. And, many got federal funds and parents like previous posters are fully paying to keep their spot (which may not be there when they want it) so where is that money going. What concerned me was all the positive cases and how many chemicals they were spraying onto surfaces to disinfect and how much of that get injected by kids.
And they are just using typical cleaning products they would use any way. If it weren’t for mass hysteria parents like you that thought that covid posed an outsized danger in day care centers when all evidence shows that it clearly doesn’t when basic safety measures are taken like mask wearing from adults, limiting or eliminating parents and non-staff from entering the center, and increasing hand washing, then they would not be adopting these completely unnecessary and scientifically unsupported “deep cleaning” practices. They are a waste of resources and all for show. You, lady, are part of the problem and have no idea what you are talking about.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:This doesn't give a lot of information. Some of those centers probably were struggling and were going to go under regardless. And, many got federal funds and parents like previous posters are fully paying to keep their spot (which may not be there when they want it) so where is that money going. What concerned me was all the positive cases and how many chemicals they were spraying onto surfaces to disinfect and how much of that get injected by kids.
The center we were at typically had very long wait lists for non siblings — like 18 months in many cases. Now they are operating at 30% capacity. How long do you think they can maintain that even with staff reductions and some people paying. The math just doesn’t work.
And they are just using typical cleaning products they would use any way. If it weren’t for mass hysteria parents like you that thought that covid posed an outsized danger in day care centers when all evidence shows that it clearly doesn’t when basic safety measures are taken like mask wearing from adults, limiting or eliminating parents and non-staff from entering the center, and increasing hand washing, then they would not be adopting these completely unnecessary and scientifically unsupported “deep cleaning” practices. They are a waste of resources and all for show. You, lady, are part of the problem and have no idea what you are talking about.
If you want a more substantive article and study, here is one from Berkeley. It’s focus is in California, but there’s no reason to think what’s happening there is markedly different that what is happening here for in many other parts of the country.
“The challenges are stark for programs that remain open:
Eight-five percent reported reduced enrollment, with the average number of students cut roughly in half.
Seventy-seven percent reported lost income, and significant numbers of providers reported they have missed rent or mortgage payments and used personal credit cards to cover expenses. Just over 40% said they have, at times, been unable to pay themselves.
Even as revenues fall, 67% reported higher staffing costs to meet health and safety requirements.
Eighty percent reported higher costs for sanitation and protective gear.”
https://news.berkeley.edu/2020/07/22/california-child-care-system-collapsing-under-covid-19-berkeley-report-says/
Anonymous wrote:This doesn't give a lot of information. Some of those centers probably were struggling and were going to go under regardless. And, many got federal funds and parents like previous posters are fully paying to keep their spot (which may not be there when they want it) so where is that money going. What concerned me was all the positive cases and how many chemicals they were spraying onto surfaces to disinfect and how much of that get injected by kids.