Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Help me understand. What is the typical schedule for morning care?
If that morning staff is normally scheduled to be off by 9 AM then I can understand canceling care because I’m assuming most of those people or many of those people have other jobs they must get to. Nobody can live off a salary that only pays for 2 to 3 hours a day.
If they operate on a normal schedule, they would work until 9 AM and then you have staff we need to go to their second job which would mean the student to teacher ratio would be off.
If you operate on a two hour delay again many of the staff would not be able to work because they have other job commitments.
That's a theoretical possibility, but before recently, they did exactly that, and it was fine. Beforecare opened at the usual time and there was staff there until school started, KAH at least used to open on days when school was cancelled for weather, and they had no problem getting staff for the whole day. If that's the justification, it's obviously not what's happening in reality. There's no reason to cancel because you can imagine a problem that we know isn't real from experience.
Me again. Who or what kind of people work at before and after care? Seniors? People who have wide open schedules for the day and are OK living on just a couple hours salary? I keep thinking it’s a staffing issue that was finally addressed. I think about ratios, and either paying staff or finding enough staff to work.
There must be a real concrete reason to cancel childcare and not just make it a willy-nilly decision. I’m sure childcare businesses were consulted.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Help me understand. What is the typical schedule for morning care?
If that morning staff is normally scheduled to be off by 9 AM then I can understand canceling care because I’m assuming most of those people or many of those people have other jobs they must get to. Nobody can live off a salary that only pays for 2 to 3 hours a day.
If they operate on a normal schedule, they would work until 9 AM and then you have staff we need to go to their second job which would mean the student to teacher ratio would be off.
If you operate on a two hour delay again many of the staff would not be able to work because they have other job commitments.
That's a theoretical possibility, but before recently, they did exactly that, and it was fine. Beforecare opened at the usual time and there was staff there until school started, KAH at least used to open on days when school was cancelled for weather, and they had no problem getting staff for the whole day. If that's the justification, it's obviously not what's happening in reality. There's no reason to cancel because you can imagine a problem that we know isn't real from experience.
How do we know KAH, etc. haven't been complaining to MCPS to make this change because the logistics have been too hard?
It certainly has not been KAH complaining. Bob is very clearly disappointed and apologetic when they are forced to close, and when I inquired about it last year he emailed right back and encouraged me and others to contact MCPS to try to get them given more discretion back.
Also it doesn't make sense that they would complain. The providers have always been allowed to close even on days when they had the freedom to stay open, and sometimes did choose to close or delay based on their assessment of local weather conditions/staffing/etc, and everyone' understood and respected those decisions. Same as any other child care provider in the county. Why would they demand less freedom to choose rather than more?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Help me understand. What is the typical schedule for morning care?
If that morning staff is normally scheduled to be off by 9 AM then I can understand canceling care because I’m assuming most of those people or many of those people have other jobs they must get to. Nobody can live off a salary that only pays for 2 to 3 hours a day.
If they operate on a normal schedule, they would work until 9 AM and then you have staff we need to go to their second job which would mean the student to teacher ratio would be off.
If you operate on a two hour delay again many of the staff would not be able to work because they have other job commitments.
That's a theoretical possibility, but before recently, they did exactly that, and it was fine. Beforecare opened at the usual time and there was staff there until school started, KAH at least used to open on days when school was cancelled for weather, and they had no problem getting staff for the whole day. If that's the justification, it's obviously not what's happening in reality. There's no reason to cancel because you can imagine a problem that we know isn't real from experience.
How do we know KAH, etc. haven't been complaining to MCPS to make this change because the logistics have been too hard?
Anonymous wrote:Wow. 10 pages and not even noon. Childcare during inclement weather school closings has been an issue for three decades and probably longer.
-Hire a babysitter.
-Get a parent who stays home and has kids who attend same school to take care of your kid for the two+ hours, pay them. Or propose a swap and you look after their kid some other time / a playdate.
-Take a sick leave from work.
-Write to state elected persons to try to break down the 'largest district in Maryland' into Northern and southern, or western and eastern regions.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:The district is sort of already being broken down into 6 regions, as proposed. If that passes, can schools in Silver Spring open even if there's an unplowed road in Damascus?
The 6 regions are just for the purpose of determining which special programs students are eligible to attend. Right now, each high school cluster is part of MCPS. These regions are just super-clusters.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Help me understand. What is the typical schedule for morning care?
If that morning staff is normally scheduled to be off by 9 AM then I can understand canceling care because I’m assuming most of those people or many of those people have other jobs they must get to. Nobody can live off a salary that only pays for 2 to 3 hours a day.
If they operate on a normal schedule, they would work until 9 AM and then you have staff we need to go to their second job which would mean the student to teacher ratio would be off.
If you operate on a two hour delay again many of the staff would not be able to work because they have other job commitments.
That's a theoretical possibility, but before recently, they did exactly that, and it was fine. Beforecare opened at the usual time and there was staff there until school started, KAH at least used to open on days when school was cancelled for weather, and they had no problem getting staff for the whole day. If that's the justification, it's obviously not what's happening in reality. There's no reason to cancel because you can imagine a problem that we know isn't real from experience.
How do we know KAH, etc. haven't been complaining to MCPS to make this change because the logistics have been too hard?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Help me understand. What is the typical schedule for morning care?
If that morning staff is normally scheduled to be off by 9 AM then I can understand canceling care because I’m assuming most of those people or many of those people have other jobs they must get to. Nobody can live off a salary that only pays for 2 to 3 hours a day.
If they operate on a normal schedule, they would work until 9 AM and then you have staff we need to go to their second job which would mean the student to teacher ratio would be off.
If you operate on a two hour delay again many of the staff would not be able to work because they have other job commitments.
That's a theoretical possibility, but before recently, they did exactly that, and it was fine. Beforecare opened at the usual time and there was staff there until school started, KAH at least used to open on days when school was cancelled for weather, and they had no problem getting staff for the whole day. If that's the justification, it's obviously not what's happening in reality. There's no reason to cancel because you can imagine a problem that we know isn't real from experience.
How do we know KAH, etc. haven't been complaining to MCPS to make this change because the logistics have been too hard?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Help me understand. What is the typical schedule for morning care?
If that morning staff is normally scheduled to be off by 9 AM then I can understand canceling care because I’m assuming most of those people or many of those people have other jobs they must get to. Nobody can live off a salary that only pays for 2 to 3 hours a day.
If they operate on a normal schedule, they would work until 9 AM and then you have staff we need to go to their second job which would mean the student to teacher ratio would be off.
If you operate on a two hour delay again many of the staff would not be able to work because they have other job commitments.
That's a theoretical possibility, but before recently, they did exactly that, and it was fine. Beforecare opened at the usual time and there was staff there until school started, KAH at least used to open on days when school was cancelled for weather, and they had no problem getting staff for the whole day. If that's the justification, it's obviously not what's happening in reality. There's no reason to cancel because you can imagine a problem that we know isn't real from experience.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Help me understand. What is the typical schedule for morning care?
If that morning staff is normally scheduled to be off by 9 AM then I can understand canceling care because I’m assuming most of those people or many of those people have other jobs they must get to. Nobody can live off a salary that only pays for 2 to 3 hours a day.
If they operate on a normal schedule, they would work until 9 AM and then you have staff we need to go to their second job which would mean the student to teacher ratio would be off.
If you operate on a two hour delay again many of the staff would not be able to work because they have other job commitments.
That's a theoretical possibility, but before recently, they did exactly that, and it was fine. Beforecare opened at the usual time and there was staff there until school started, KAH at least used to open on days when school was cancelled for weather, and they had no problem getting staff for the whole day. If that's the justification, it's obviously not what's happening in reality. There's no reason to cancel because you can imagine a problem that we know isn't real from experience.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:OP does not comprehend that workers at childcare centers exist and go home at night.
This. Should they sleep at work the night before?
Anonymous wrote:The district is sort of already being broken down into 6 regions, as proposed. If that passes, can schools in Silver Spring open even if there's an unplowed road in Damascus?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Help me understand. What is the typical schedule for morning care?
If that morning staff is normally scheduled to be off by 9 AM then I can understand canceling care because I’m assuming most of those people or many of those people have other jobs they must get to. Nobody can live off a salary that only pays for 2 to 3 hours a day.
If they operate on a normal schedule, they would work until 9 AM and then you have staff we need to go to their second job which would mean the student to teacher ratio would be off.
If you operate on a two hour delay again many of the staff would not be able to work because they have other job commitments.
That's a theoretical possibility, but before recently, they did exactly that, and it was fine. Beforecare opened at the usual time and there was staff there until school started, KAH at least used to open on days when school was cancelled for weather, and they had no problem getting staff for the whole day. If that's the justification, it's obviously not what's happening in reality. There's no reason to cancel because you can imagine a problem that we know isn't real from experience.
Anonymous wrote:OP does not comprehend that workers at childcare centers exist and go home at night.