Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:So sorry you aren’t allowed to send your kids to school sick and give me covid. Get f***ed, op.
Childcare provider
Let me know how avoiding covid in perpetuity goes for you. . .but let's blame parents who need to work to put a roof over their heads and food on the table.
It’s been going pretty well, hon. 2.5 years and I still haven’t gotten covid, thanks to the shut downs. Childcare providers are in demand, I quit my daycare job to work as a nanny for $33/hr instead of $18.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Who are the people still voluntarily testing for covid?
I avoid it at all costs because of these policies, but sometimes there are forcing functions. e.g. I had a work event that required PCR tests; daycare requires PCR test (!) to return after ANY illness, and a hacking cough or obvious fever is hard to hide even medicated.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:So sorry you aren’t allowed to send your kids to school sick and give me covid. Get f***ed, op.
Childcare provider
Let me know how avoiding covid in perpetuity goes for you. . .but let's blame parents who need to work to put a roof over their heads and food on the table.
It’s been going pretty well, hon. 2.5 years and I still haven’t gotten covid, thanks to the shut downs. Childcare providers are in demand, I quit my daycare job to work as a nanny for $33/hr instead of $18.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I don't understand why the Arlington VA daycare is closed for 10 days - ours stays open when there is a direct exposure. Honestly I wouldn't mind a quarantine of 5 days (an unpopular opinion on dcum)
The trouble is, it isn’t a quarantine. If you close daycare, I hire sitters and lean on family. So he has MORE exposures in a week of closed daycare than a week of open daycare.
When your kid is exposed to covid, you hire sitters? Nice. What if your kids ends up with covid? Do you pay that sitter 10 extra days while they can’t work?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:So sorry you aren’t allowed to send your kids to school sick and give me covid. Get f***ed, op.
Childcare provider
Let me know how avoiding covid in perpetuity goes for you. . .but let's blame parents who need to work to put a roof over their heads and food on the table.
It’s been going pretty well, hon. 2.5 years and I still haven’t gotten covid, thanks to the shut downs. Childcare providers are in demand, I quit my daycare job to work as a nanny for $33/hr instead of $18.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:So sorry you aren’t allowed to send your kids to school sick and give me covid. Get f***ed, op.
Childcare provider
Let me know how avoiding covid in perpetuity goes for you. . .but let's blame parents who need to work to put a roof over their heads and food on the table.
Anonymous wrote:So sorry you aren’t allowed to send your kids to school sick and give me covid. Get f***ed, op.
Childcare provider
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I don't understand why the Arlington VA daycare is closed for 10 days - ours stays open when there is a direct exposure. Honestly I wouldn't mind a quarantine of 5 days (an unpopular opinion on dcum)
The trouble is, it isn’t a quarantine. If you close daycare, I hire sitters and lean on family. So he has MORE exposures in a week of closed daycare than a week of open daycare.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Who are the people still voluntarily testing for covid?
I avoid it at all costs because of these policies, but sometimes there are forcing functions. e.g. I had a work event that required PCR tests; daycare requires PCR test (!) to return after ANY illness, and a hacking cough or obvious fever is hard to hide even medicated.
So, if not for those reasons, you would avoid testing in an effort to hide a COVID case and spread it to others at your child’s daycare?
You reap what you sow with ridiculous policies. Sorry not sorry.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Who are the people still voluntarily testing for covid?
I avoid it at all costs because of these policies, but sometimes there are forcing functions. e.g. I had a work event that required PCR tests; daycare requires PCR test (!) to return after ANY illness, and a hacking cough or obvious fever is hard to hide even medicated.
So, if not for those reasons, you would avoid testing in an effort to hide a COVID case and spread it to others at your child’s daycare?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Who are the people still voluntarily testing for covid?
I avoid it at all costs because of these policies, but sometimes there are forcing functions. e.g. I had a work event that required PCR tests; daycare requires PCR test (!) to return after ANY illness, and a hacking cough or obvious fever is hard to hide even medicated.
Anonymous wrote:Who are the people still voluntarily testing for covid?