Anonymous wrote:Ours has been going for a few weeks now. Sounds like they're full now (with reduced capacity, that seemed inevitable). My wife's workload got insane once quarantine hit, so she hunkered down in our office and was knocking out solid says. While my job is more flexible and I can work odd hours to get my things done, it was beginning to impact my work quality with so many projects + toddler time. With ours going to a new daycare/preschool, it's lessened the pressure on everyone, and the mood is certainly brighter around our house.
So yes, dads do sacrifice too, so hop off your horse about it being only moms. I'm sure if you poll the nation, it sadly probably is more moms than dads though
Anonymous wrote:OP here. Thanks for all the feedback. Good to hear that there may be spots. Maybe we should just see what's out there. Also agree that we'd probably assume we have COVID at all times if DS was back in group care. I've never been sicker than his first year at daycare with all the random things he brought home, so it's hard for me to imagine a scenario where COVID wouldn't, at some point, spread through a daycare and home. But as others said, that may be the cost of doing business. Hard choices all around.
Anonymous wrote:OP here. Thanks for all the feedback. Good to hear that there may be spots. Maybe we should just see what's out there. Also agree that we'd probably assume we have COVID at all times if DS was back in group care. I've never been sicker than his first year at daycare with all the random things he brought home, so it's hard for me to imagine a scenario where COVID wouldn't, at some point, spread through a daycare and home. But as others said, that may be the cost of doing business. Hard choices all around.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:We switched to a new daycare and started back at the beginning of July. It’s been great.
Our old daycare finally just reopened and had a teacher test positive the second week. I don’t think they did anything wrong, they had all the protocol in place, just unlucky. So far no other staff or students there have tested positive (we still get their emails and speak to some families there). But it is a good reminder that daycare is still risky. I wouldn’t be surprised if there were lots of shut downs again as local cases go back up.
In other words, if you don't mind the risk of Covid, sending kids to daycare is fine.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:We switched to a new daycare and started back at the beginning of July. It’s been great.
Our old daycare finally just reopened and had a teacher test positive the second week. I don’t think they did anything wrong, they had all the protocol in place, just unlucky. So far no other staff or students there have tested positive (we still get their emails and speak to some families there). But it is a good reminder that daycare is still risky. I wouldn’t be surprised if there were lots of shut downs again as local cases go back up.
In other words, if you don't mind the risk of Covid, sending kids to daycare is fine.
You're right, we women should just quit our jobs if we can't afford a nanny. It's not like our jobs are important anyway.
For some people daycare is a necessity.
Wow, I don't understand the snakiness in this post. PP was saying the truth, there is a risk to sending kids back to daycare. For most, the benefit outweighs the risk. My child has been back for a month now and it's fantastic.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:We switched to a new daycare and started back at the beginning of July. It’s been great.
Our old daycare finally just reopened and had a teacher test positive the second week. I don’t think they did anything wrong, they had all the protocol in place, just unlucky. So far no other staff or students there have tested positive (we still get their emails and speak to some families there). But it is a good reminder that daycare is still risky. I wouldn’t be surprised if there were lots of shut downs again as local cases go back up.
In other words, if you don't mind the risk of Covid, sending kids to daycare is fine.
You're right, we women should just quit our jobs if we can't afford a nanny. It's not like our jobs are important anyway.
For some people daycare is a necessity.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:We switched to a new daycare and started back at the beginning of July. It’s been great.
Our old daycare finally just reopened and had a teacher test positive the second week. I don’t think they did anything wrong, they had all the protocol in place, just unlucky. So far no other staff or students there have tested positive (we still get their emails and speak to some families there). But it is a good reminder that daycare is still risky. I wouldn’t be surprised if there were lots of shut downs again as local cases go back up.
In other words, if you don't mind the risk of Covid, sending kids to daycare is fine.
PP here. There’s risk everywhere. It’s a calculated risk and for us the benefits outweighs it. Benefits include keeping our jobs and socialization for our 3 year old. Daycare is the least bad option we have right now.
Anonymous wrote:Our center closed in March, and we recently learned it is opening again in mid August. We're definitely sending DD back as we are both exhausted. I genuinely feel I'm on the verge of a breakdown.
If you are feeling similarly, why not take 20 minutes to call around (I know for me those 20 minutes even feel overwhelming so I get it)? Some places are opening back up now and may have some families not returning.
Anonymous wrote:Curious if anyone has gotten sick at the center?
If so what were the procedures