Anonymous wrote:I do think it's annoying though when providers don't schedule the same week every year in the summer. Ours would tell us about 2 months in advance and each year it was a different week and even different month and there was no easy way to plan for it. Luckily we were able to find a solution, but like all preschools that have a set vacation day schedule, I think a daycare provider should do the same or arrange for some sort of backup arrangement. Ours helped us find other arrangements so in the end I wasn't too put off by the whole thing.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:You're daycare set-up sounds exactly like mine when dd was in daycare. Yes, you pay the vacation. I was glad to do it--I considered my provider and her assistants to be integral in raising my child with me.
Too bad more parents dont feel the way you do. If one has an excellent daycare where you know your child is taken care of, safe, loved, etc. The rest should be mute points. Period
Moot points. Or, if you're Joey from Friends, moo points. Like a cow's opinion. It doesn't matter.

Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:You're daycare set-up sounds exactly like mine when dd was in daycare. Yes, you pay the vacation. I was glad to do it--I considered my provider and her assistants to be integral in raising my child with me.
Too bad more parents dont feel the way you do. If one has an excellent daycare where you know your child is taken care of, safe, loved, etc. The rest should be mute points. Period
Moot points. Or, if you're Joey from Friends, moo points. Like a cow's opinion. It doesn't matter.
. Best post of the day!Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:You're daycare set-up sounds exactly like mine when dd was in daycare. Yes, you pay the vacation. I was glad to do it--I considered my provider and her assistants to be integral in raising my child with me.
Too bad more parents dont feel the way you do. If one has an excellent daycare where you know your child is taken care of, safe, loved, etc. The rest should be mute points. Period
Anonymous wrote:It's standard, as everyone's said. And quite honestly, all daycares charge for vacation time, whether directly or indirectly--they're either asking you to pay a flat monthly fee for all months (most common in my experience) or they're charging you week by week, but adjusting rates to allow them to cover vacations and other benefits for employees or other expenses related to running the business. Either way it comes down to what you're comfortable paying and what you're getting for that.
I would also not be in a position to choose a daycare closed for four weeks of the year, though; I don't have enough vacation to cover that time, so I'd be paying double for alternate care, and I can't afford to do that either. Two weeks works well, though--we try to plan our family vacation around one of them, and then the other DH and I split taking time off to cover it. That leaves us enough vacation time left to cover sick days and the like.
Anonymous wrote:A lot of in-home daycares I interviewed do not charge for vacation time. It varies. And frankly, it disgusted me. The daycare owner is not my employee. Rather, she brings in about 10x what I make a month, and it is SHE who should be paying HER employees salaries when they are on THEIR vacations. I don't pay restaurants when they close, or any establishment for that matter.
Anonymous wrote:You're daycare set-up sounds exactly like mine when dd was in daycare. Yes, you pay the vacation. I was glad to do it--I considered my provider and her assistants to be integral in raising my child with me.