Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:We do not have flexible schedules. I'm hoping to send my kids to school like normal!
If they aren't there, they will be at some sort of day care or camp or co-op sitter like the majority of kids. Which is why they might as well just open schools! Going to school a couple days a week does very little to minimize risk in my opinion.
I’m curious- why do you think there will be day care or camp available? It’s hard enough to find aftercare in normal situations. I think it will be 10xs as hard to even find a spot.
This is not sustainable. They need to open schools for 4-5 days a week for all children. They need to stop with all these crazy unworkable options. They need to focus on real options for the fall. Rent space - there is plenty of it now.
DP here. In our area there are countless TKD/gymnastics/dance places that operate after school/summer/snow day camps. Many have been operating day care during the closure and I definitely see them adapting to the hybrid school model. They make way more money on childcare than their actual classes. I don’t see childcare being an issue at all where I am, other than cost.
Thanks but this is a DMV centered board and there are not countless TKD/gymnastics/dance opening like that during this closure.
Im in the area and I do think that if they are allowed to operate in the fall (already got 2 emails saying "camp is back on" from our TKD place and our tennis club for July) then they will certainly jump at the chance for revenue. I don't blame them. It just seems silly then to avoid school because of the idea that it will be too much exposure- since now we have doubled the kids' exposure to 2 groups with a hybrid model
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:We do not have flexible schedules. I'm hoping to send my kids to school like normal!
If they aren't there, they will be at some sort of day care or camp or co-op sitter like the majority of kids. Which is why they might as well just open schools! Going to school a couple days a week does very little to minimize risk in my opinion.
I’m curious- why do you think there will be day care or camp available? It’s hard enough to find aftercare in normal situations. I think it will be 10xs as hard to even find a spot.
This is not sustainable. They need to open schools for 4-5 days a week for all children. They need to stop with all these crazy unworkable options. They need to focus on real options for the fall. Rent space - there is plenty of it now.
DP here. In our area there are countless TKD/gymnastics/dance places that operate after school/summer/snow day camps. Many have been operating day care during the closure and I definitely see them adapting to the hybrid school model. They make way more money on childcare than their actual classes. I don’t see childcare being an issue at all where I am, other than cost.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:As a nanny this is great for us. If you want to keep my availability open, you need to pay me 40hrs. I already have a new family. Old family just wanted to pay me for part time hours, but new family is willing to pay full time to retain me in case of shut downs or schedule changes so I get guaranteed hours. I suggest you do the same if you want to keep reliable childcare. Nannies won’t stick around if they can get paid full time hours somewhere else.
I wouldn’t want you caring for my child, you stupid twat.
Why are you attacking the nanny?
She is being paid to be available. It is fine if you don’t want that arrangement.
Clearly pp is upset she needs to pay someone for their time. I guess she thought a nanny should set aside 40hrs a week for free, while being paid for part time?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:We do not have flexible schedules. I'm hoping to send my kids to school like normal!
If they aren't there, they will be at some sort of day care or camp or co-op sitter like the majority of kids. Which is why they might as well just open schools! Going to school a couple days a week does very little to minimize risk in my opinion.
I’m curious- why do you think there will be day care or camp available? It’s hard enough to find aftercare in normal situations. I think it will be 10xs as hard to even find a spot.
This is not sustainable. They need to open schools for 4-5 days a week for all children. They need to stop with all these crazy unworkable options. They need to focus on real options for the fall. Rent space - there is plenty of it now.
Anonymous wrote:If kids are only going to school 5 out of 10 days (2 one week 3 the next) can you manage that if work goes back to some level of normal? Or is everyone expecting telecommuting to be a given?
I am not sure I could do the whole year after these last few months.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:We do not have flexible schedules. I'm hoping to send my kids to school like normal!
If they aren't there, they will be at some sort of day care or camp or co-op sitter like the majority of kids. Which is why they might as well just open schools! Going to school a couple days a week does very little to minimize risk in my opinion.
I’m curious- why do you think there will be day care or camp available? It’s hard enough to find aftercare in normal situations. I think it will be 10xs as hard to even find a spot.
This is not sustainable. They need to open schools for 4-5 days a week for all children. They need to stop with all these crazy unworkable options. They need to focus on real options for the fall. Rent space - there is plenty of it now.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:We do not have flexible schedules. I'm hoping to send my kids to school like normal!
If they aren't there, they will be at some sort of day care or camp or co-op sitter like the majority of kids. Which is why they might as well just open schools! Going to school a couple days a week does very little to minimize risk in my opinion.
It’s not the fewer days itself that minimizes risk. It’s the fact that to have smaller class sizes to allow for more distancing, most schools can only accommodate a smaller number of students.
Anonymous wrote:We do not have flexible schedules. I'm hoping to send my kids to school like normal!
If they aren't there, they will be at some sort of day care or camp or co-op sitter like the majority of kids. Which is why they might as well just open schools! Going to school a couple days a week does very little to minimize risk in my opinion.
Anonymous wrote:OOOPs, I read wrong. So you just want an advantage for your JULY kid NEXT fall? tough titties. That K class is going to be huge.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:As a nanny this is great for us. If you want to keep my availability open, you need to pay me 40hrs. I already have a new family. Old family just wanted to pay me for part time hours, but new family is willing to pay full time to retain me in case of shut downs or schedule changes so I get guaranteed hours. I suggest you do the same if you want to keep reliable childcare. Nannies won’t stick around if they can get paid full time hours somewhere else.
I wouldn’t want you caring for my child, you stupid twat.
Why are you attacking the nanny?
She is being paid to be available. It is fine if you don’t want that arrangement.