Anonymous wrote:"Net zero" ? Does that mean with an HHI of 200 you save nothing?
Anonymous wrote:I'd use savings to pay for the day care I was more comfortable with and wouldn't think twice about it.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:We found an in-home with a 2:1 ratio for $1200 / month in Arlington. No TV. Loving caregivers. I feel like we won the lottery; we put $800 / month into the 529 that we would've paid a commercial daycare.
There are unicorns out there, you just have to look.
Name? contact info?
So you can throw off my ratios!?
Sadly, she doesn't have availability for the foreseeable future (through at least July); we just asked yesterday for our neighbors.
Anonymous wrote:First few years are very important developmentally. Spend the money on better care.
For example, with a high staff:child ratio, some kids will be left crying for a while, as the provider attends to other babies. For little ones, that can be really traumatic.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:What makes option B better? I've toured a lot of centers and in-home providers and once you're above the $250/week threshold, I didn't find a strong correlation between quality & price. Price seemed to be more a reflection of the rent that the center was paying, and perhaps a premium that was meant to signal better care, but didn't necessary mean better care, ie - more administrative oversight, which can provide some value, but also may not mean much.
Same here. There seemed to be no rhyme or reason to costs based on how the centers looked and were run. We're in MD so there's a state mandated ratio, so that variable was removed.
Anonymous wrote:What makes option B better? I've toured a lot of centers and in-home providers and once you're above the $250/week threshold, I didn't find a strong correlation between quality & price. Price seemed to be more a reflection of the rent that the center was paying, and perhaps a premium that was meant to signal better care, but didn't necessary mean better care, ie - more administrative oversight, which can provide some value, but also may not mean much.

Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:We found an in-home with a 2:1 ratio for $1200 / month in Arlington. No TV. Loving caregivers. I feel like we won the lottery; we put $800 / month into the 529 that we would've paid a commercial daycare.
There are unicorns out there, you just have to look.
Name? contact info?