Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:The solution is to end the ridiculous 14 day quarantine for children under 5. There have been numerous instances in our daycare (masked 2-5 year olds) where a child went home with covid-symptoms and waited for a PCR test for 5-7 days while the rest of the class continued and the PCR came back positive and the class started quarantining on day 5-7. Do you know how many times someone got covid? Zero. I would be very surprised if there was any "science" that said 14 day resulted in fewer infections that 10 day or 5 day or test to stay. Two years into this our politicians continue to make fear based decisions about young children.
Who has mandatory quarantines for kids under 5? They’re not required in Maryland or Montgomery County. Quarantines are only required for outbreaks.
Yes, many providers are refusing to meet their obligations under their enrollment agreements, but don’t blame that on the heath regulations.
Our daycare has shut down entire classrooms repeatedly for single cases (mostly teachers, although I believe there have been 3 children with positive cases in the past 22 months). There's been no spread amongst the children or staff. Classes were shut down for 14 days at first, but now that is down to 10 days. We've been told that this is the instruction provided to daycare from the health department. We are in Loudoun.
Something has to give with this. We had an outbreak of RSV last summer (5 toddlers in one room), and no one shut down for that.
I’m not as familiar with Virginia regulations, but I know there are no requirements for quarantines in Maryland/MoCo for single cases. Providers still suggesting quarantines are required, but that simply isn’t true. I strongly suspect that's the case in Virginia. The health department likely doesn't have any authority unless there is an outbreak involving multiple, epidemiologically-linked cases. And the state/county child care regulations likely just say providers must follow the legal orders from health departments.
This is OP. The daycare is in Montgomery County. One child has covid, no teachers or other students. Health Department apparently advised them to stay closed for what amounts to 10 week days. I'm tempted to call BS that the center director actually talked to the health department if what you're saying is true.
I can personally attest that this is true. I am also a daycare and spoke to the health department last week due to in class exposure and we are also closed for 10 days. Call BS all you want and feel free to call the health department. Ask to speak to the same person so you have your answer. Trust me, dealing with COVID is not fun. But you know what is worse than COVID? Parents who think we are trying to pull a fast one on them.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:The solution is to end the ridiculous 14 day quarantine for children under 5. There have been numerous instances in our daycare (masked 2-5 year olds) where a child went home with covid-symptoms and waited for a PCR test for 5-7 days while the rest of the class continued and the PCR came back positive and the class started quarantining on day 5-7. Do you know how many times someone got covid? Zero. I would be very surprised if there was any "science" that said 14 day resulted in fewer infections that 10 day or 5 day or test to stay. Two years into this our politicians continue to make fear based decisions about young children.
Who has mandatory quarantines for kids under 5? They’re not required in Maryland or Montgomery County. Quarantines are only required for outbreaks.
Yes, many providers are refusing to meet their obligations under their enrollment agreements, but don’t blame that on the heath regulations.
Our daycare has shut down entire classrooms repeatedly for single cases (mostly teachers, although I believe there have been 3 children with positive cases in the past 22 months). There's been no spread amongst the children or staff. Classes were shut down for 14 days at first, but now that is down to 10 days. We've been told that this is the instruction provided to daycare from the health department. We are in Loudoun.
Something has to give with this. We had an outbreak of RSV last summer (5 toddlers in one room), and no one shut down for that.
I’m not as familiar with Virginia regulations, but I know there are no requirements for quarantines in Maryland/MoCo for single cases. Providers still suggesting quarantines are required, but that simply isn’t true. I strongly suspect that's the case in Virginia. The health department likely doesn't have any authority unless there is an outbreak involving multiple, epidemiologically-linked cases. And the state/county child care regulations likely just say providers must follow the legal orders from health departments.
This is OP. The daycare is in Montgomery County. One child has covid, no teachers or other students. Health Department apparently advised them to stay closed for what amounts to 10 week days. I'm tempted to call BS that the center director actually talked to the health department if what you're saying is true.
I can personally attest that this is true. I am also a daycare and spoke to the health department last week due to in class exposure and we are also closed for 10 days. Call BS all you want and feel free to call the health department. Ask to speak to the same person so you have your answer. Trust me, dealing with COVID is not fun. But you know what is worse than COVID? Parents who think we are trying to pull a fast one on them.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:The solution is to end the ridiculous 14 day quarantine for children under 5. There have been numerous instances in our daycare (masked 2-5 year olds) where a child went home with covid-symptoms and waited for a PCR test for 5-7 days while the rest of the class continued and the PCR came back positive and the class started quarantining on day 5-7. Do you know how many times someone got covid? Zero. I would be very surprised if there was any "science" that said 14 day resulted in fewer infections that 10 day or 5 day or test to stay. Two years into this our politicians continue to make fear based decisions about young children.
Who has mandatory quarantines for kids under 5? They’re not required in Maryland or Montgomery County. Quarantines are only required for outbreaks.
Yes, many providers are refusing to meet their obligations under their enrollment agreements, but don’t blame that on the heath regulations.
Our daycare has shut down entire classrooms repeatedly for single cases (mostly teachers, although I believe there have been 3 children with positive cases in the past 22 months). There's been no spread amongst the children or staff. Classes were shut down for 14 days at first, but now that is down to 10 days. We've been told that this is the instruction provided to daycare from the health department. We are in Loudoun.
Something has to give with this. We had an outbreak of RSV last summer (5 toddlers in one room), and no one shut down for that.
I’m not as familiar with Virginia regulations, but I know there are no requirements for quarantines in Maryland/MoCo for single cases. Providers still suggesting quarantines are required, but that simply isn’t true. I strongly suspect that's the case in Virginia. The health department likely doesn't have any authority unless there is an outbreak involving multiple, epidemiologically-linked cases. And the state/county child care regulations likely just say providers must follow the legal orders from health departments.
This is OP. The daycare is in Montgomery County. One child has covid, no teachers or other students. Health Department apparently advised them to stay closed for what amounts to 10 week days. I'm tempted to call BS that the center director actually talked to the health department if what you're saying is true.
The daycare is correct. The posters saying quarantines are not required or only for when multiple kids are sick is not true. A 14-day quarantine is still required for a positive case of a child under 5. I wish it were different, but that is the case. How could parents not know this?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:The solution is to end the ridiculous 14 day quarantine for children under 5. There have been numerous instances in our daycare (masked 2-5 year olds) where a child went home with covid-symptoms and waited for a PCR test for 5-7 days while the rest of the class continued and the PCR came back positive and the class started quarantining on day 5-7. Do you know how many times someone got covid? Zero. I would be very surprised if there was any "science" that said 14 day resulted in fewer infections that 10 day or 5 day or test to stay. Two years into this our politicians continue to make fear based decisions about young children.
Who has mandatory quarantines for kids under 5? They’re not required in Maryland or Montgomery County. Quarantines are only required for outbreaks.
Yes, many providers are refusing to meet their obligations under their enrollment agreements, but don’t blame that on the heath regulations.
Our daycare has shut down entire classrooms repeatedly for single cases (mostly teachers, although I believe there have been 3 children with positive cases in the past 22 months). There's been no spread amongst the children or staff. Classes were shut down for 14 days at first, but now that is down to 10 days. We've been told that this is the instruction provided to daycare from the health department. We are in Loudoun.
Something has to give with this. We had an outbreak of RSV last summer (5 toddlers in one room), and no one shut down for that.
I’m not as familiar with Virginia regulations, but I know there are no requirements for quarantines in Maryland/MoCo for single cases. Providers still suggesting quarantines are required, but that simply isn’t true. I strongly suspect that's the case in Virginia. The health department likely doesn't have any authority unless there is an outbreak involving multiple, epidemiologically-linked cases. And the state/county child care regulations likely just say providers must follow the legal orders from health departments.
This is OP. The daycare is in Montgomery County. One child has covid, no teachers or other students. Health Department apparently advised them to stay closed for what amounts to 10 week days. I'm tempted to call BS that the center director actually talked to the health department if what you're saying is true.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:The solution is to end the ridiculous 14 day quarantine for children under 5. There have been numerous instances in our daycare (masked 2-5 year olds) where a child went home with covid-symptoms and waited for a PCR test for 5-7 days while the rest of the class continued and the PCR came back positive and the class started quarantining on day 5-7. Do you know how many times someone got covid? Zero. I would be very surprised if there was any "science" that said 14 day resulted in fewer infections that 10 day or 5 day or test to stay. Two years into this our politicians continue to make fear based decisions about young children.
Who has mandatory quarantines for kids under 5? They’re not required in Maryland or Montgomery County. Quarantines are only required for outbreaks.
Yes, many providers are refusing to meet their obligations under their enrollment agreements, but don’t blame that on the heath regulations.
Our daycare has shut down entire classrooms repeatedly for single cases (mostly teachers, although I believe there have been 3 children with positive cases in the past 22 months). There's been no spread amongst the children or staff. Classes were shut down for 14 days at first, but now that is down to 10 days. We've been told that this is the instruction provided to daycare from the health department. We are in Loudoun.
Something has to give with this. We had an outbreak of RSV last summer (5 toddlers in one room), and no one shut down for that.
I’m not as familiar with Virginia regulations, but I know there are no requirements for quarantines in Maryland/MoCo for single cases. Providers still suggesting quarantines are required, but that simply isn’t true. I strongly suspect that's the case in Virginia. The health department likely doesn't have any authority unless there is an outbreak involving multiple, epidemiologically-linked cases. And the state/county child care regulations likely just say providers must follow the legal orders from health departments.
This is OP. The daycare is in Montgomery County. One child has covid, no teachers or other students. Health Department apparently advised them to stay closed for what amounts to 10 week days. I'm tempted to call BS that the center director actually talked to the health department if what you're saying is true.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:The solution is to end the ridiculous 14 day quarantine for children under 5. There have been numerous instances in our daycare (masked 2-5 year olds) where a child went home with covid-symptoms and waited for a PCR test for 5-7 days while the rest of the class continued and the PCR came back positive and the class started quarantining on day 5-7. Do you know how many times someone got covid? Zero. I would be very surprised if there was any "science" that said 14 day resulted in fewer infections that 10 day or 5 day or test to stay. Two years into this our politicians continue to make fear based decisions about young children.
Who has mandatory quarantines for kids under 5? They’re not required in Maryland or Montgomery County. Quarantines are only required for outbreaks.
Yes, many providers are refusing to meet their obligations under their enrollment agreements, but don’t blame that on the heath regulations.
Our daycare has shut down entire classrooms repeatedly for single cases (mostly teachers, although I believe there have been 3 children with positive cases in the past 22 months). There's been no spread amongst the children or staff. Classes were shut down for 14 days at first, but now that is down to 10 days. We've been told that this is the instruction provided to daycare from the health department. We are in Loudoun.
Something has to give with this. We had an outbreak of RSV last summer (5 toddlers in one room), and no one shut down for that.
I’m not as familiar with Virginia regulations, but I know there are no requirements for quarantines in Maryland/MoCo for single cases. Providers still suggesting quarantines are required, but that simply isn’t true. I strongly suspect that's the case in Virginia. The health department likely doesn't have any authority unless there is an outbreak involving multiple, epidemiologically-linked cases. And the state/county child care regulations likely just say providers must follow the legal orders from health departments.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:The solution is to end the ridiculous 14 day quarantine for children under 5. There have been numerous instances in our daycare (masked 2-5 year olds) where a child went home with covid-symptoms and waited for a PCR test for 5-7 days while the rest of the class continued and the PCR came back positive and the class started quarantining on day 5-7. Do you know how many times someone got covid? Zero. I would be very surprised if there was any "science" that said 14 day resulted in fewer infections that 10 day or 5 day or test to stay. Two years into this our politicians continue to make fear based decisions about young children.
Who has mandatory quarantines for kids under 5? They’re not required in Maryland or Montgomery County. Quarantines are only required for outbreaks.
Yes, many providers are refusing to meet their obligations under their enrollment agreements, but don’t blame that on the heath regulations.
Our daycare has shut down entire classrooms repeatedly for single cases (mostly teachers, although I believe there have been 3 children with positive cases in the past 22 months). There's been no spread amongst the children or staff. Classes were shut down for 14 days at first, but now that is down to 10 days. We've been told that this is the instruction provided to daycare from the health department. We are in Loudoun.
Something has to give with this. We had an outbreak of RSV last summer (5 toddlers in one room), and no one shut down for that.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:The solution is to end the ridiculous 14 day quarantine for children under 5. There have been numerous instances in our daycare (masked 2-5 year olds) where a child went home with covid-symptoms and waited for a PCR test for 5-7 days while the rest of the class continued and the PCR came back positive and the class started quarantining on day 5-7. Do you know how many times someone got covid? Zero. I would be very surprised if there was any "science" that said 14 day resulted in fewer infections that 10 day or 5 day or test to stay. Two years into this our politicians continue to make fear based decisions about young children.
Who has mandatory quarantines for kids under 5? They’re not required in Maryland or Montgomery County. Quarantines are only required for outbreaks.
Yes, many providers are refusing to meet their obligations under their enrollment agreements, but don’t blame that on the heath regulations.
Our daycare has shut down entire classrooms repeatedly for single cases (mostly teachers, although I believe there have been 3 children with positive cases in the past 22 months). There's been no spread amongst the children or staff. Classes were shut down for 14 days at first, but now that is down to 10 days. We've been told that this is the instruction provided to daycare from the health department. We are in Loudoun.
Something has to give with this. We had an outbreak of RSV last summer (5 toddlers in one room), and no one shut down for that.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:The solution is to end the ridiculous 14 day quarantine for children under 5. There have been numerous instances in our daycare (masked 2-5 year olds) where a child went home with covid-symptoms and waited for a PCR test for 5-7 days while the rest of the class continued and the PCR came back positive and the class started quarantining on day 5-7. Do you know how many times someone got covid? Zero. I would be very surprised if there was any "science" that said 14 day resulted in fewer infections that 10 day or 5 day or test to stay. Two years into this our politicians continue to make fear based decisions about young children.
Who has mandatory quarantines for kids under 5? They’re not required in Maryland or Montgomery County. Quarantines are only required for outbreaks.
Yes, many providers are refusing to meet their obligations under their enrollment agreements, but don’t blame that on the heath regulations.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:OP here. I was just asking. So many rude and snarky replies. DCUM sucks.
What answers did you expect? Seriously. You’re an adult.
I actually think most of the replies are from idiots. Sorry, OP. Our daycare does NOT charge for COVID closed classrooms when it was a staff member who brought COVID in. If it came from a kid, then they charge. It's not an obvious outcome so your question is valid.
How many times have they admitted it was a staff member who brought it in?
Three times out of six total.
Wow! How many teachers are in your daycare? Three covid cases is a lot!
Roughly 20
That’s a lot of Covid cases for 20, isn’t it?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:The solution is to end the ridiculous 14 day quarantine for children under 5. There have been numerous instances in our daycare (masked 2-5 year olds) where a child went home with covid-symptoms and waited for a PCR test for 5-7 days while the rest of the class continued and the PCR came back positive and the class started quarantining on day 5-7. Do you know how many times someone got covid? Zero. I would be very surprised if there was any "science" that said 14 day resulted in fewer infections that 10 day or 5 day or test to stay. Two years into this our politicians continue to make fear based decisions about young children.
Yawn. Don’t like the policies? Quit and stay home.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:OP here. I was just asking. So many rude and snarky replies. DCUM sucks.
What answers did you expect? Seriously. You’re an adult.
I actually think most of the replies are from idiots. Sorry, OP. Our daycare does NOT charge for COVID closed classrooms when it was a staff member who brought COVID in. If it came from a kid, then they charge. It's not an obvious outcome so your question is valid.
How many times have they admitted it was a staff member who brought it in?
Three times out of six total.
Wow! How many teachers are in your daycare? Three covid cases is a lot!
Roughly 20
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:OP here. I was just asking. So many rude and snarky replies. DCUM sucks.
What answers did you expect? Seriously. You’re an adult.
I actually think most of the replies are from idiots. Sorry, OP. Our daycare does NOT charge for COVID closed classrooms when it was a staff member who brought COVID in. If it came from a kid, then they charge. It's not an obvious outcome so your question is valid.
How many times have they admitted it was a staff member who brought it in?
Three times out of six total.
Wow! How many teachers are in your daycare? Three covid cases is a lot!