Book a Demo!
CoCalc Logo Icon
StoreFeaturesDocsShareSupportNewsAboutPoliciesSign UpSign In
Download
29548 views
1
2
3
4
5
well i haven't had an awful lot of uh incidents in regarding child care when my two year old was in New Orleans she got bit on the cheek and uh but uh that's about the the uh the extent of it
6
7
8
9
10
11
12
13
14
but but but the when i really am uh am concerned about is that uh so many of these child care places are are coming under uh uh you know investigation for for uh you know child molestation
15
16
17
uh-huh
18
19
20
and i and i and i'm saying to myself well you know you you dump your your your little turnip off to uh you know this child care place and they don't pay very much
21
and why why why would they be interested in your in your little turnip unless you know one of the motivations in the hidden agenda is well that's somebody to molest you know
22
23
24
uh-huh
25
26
27
and uh that's a terrible kind of thing and i i don't think my children have ever been subject to that but my wife didn't work and so we didn't really didn't have that much exposure to it
28
29
30
uh-huh
31
well i am a working mother i have three children and my children since i um since they were very young i've had various various um different alternatives child care arrangements and
32
like most working mothers i i'm really not defensive about it i personally feel um in our particular situation i'm a much better mother when i work out of the home and
33
my kids i think are very very secure well raised children my comment on this is that we paid an absolute fortune over the years for a variety of opportunities
34
35
36
hm
37
38
39
so i i i uh you know it is a problem and but as you pointed out i think i think the real problem is the low pay child care facilities and that is sometimes what some women who have to work that is all they can afford
40
when our children were very young we had a pay a live in paid babysitter that was wonderful and then as they got older they went to uh i preferred to call them schools and they really were all day preschools and they were wonderful
41
42
43
hm
44
45
46
and i think they got exposed to a lot of neat things
47
48
49
oh well that's interesting
50
51
52
but we did we really truly did pay a fortune i mean we were paying
53
at one point
54
well about about close uh close to about five hundred dollars a week for two children
55
56
57
oh my God well you must have a just one hero ace professional job to support something like that
58
59
60
so
61
well i'm a physician i'm a physician uh and as is my husband and i and i felt very uh very good about working i'm a pediatrician actually
62
63
64
oh well yeah
65
um-hum
66
67
68
so uh but i think there are some wonderful child care opportunities out there for children but and we all know the kind of things that you're supposed to look for i think
69
70
71
well not not all of us you know what the kind of things you're supposed to look for i'm an engineer and
72
73
74
75
76
oh
77
well i think it's real important that you have a place that first of all parents have a lot of input into and that they're always welcome and that they have a lot of activities where parents come in during the day and that at any time you can drop in
78
and we had a really wonderful arrangement um i'm with the university actually and they had a wonderful uh program that started at age three
79
80
81
uh-huh
82
83
84
and it was about a block away from the hospital where i work and so many times at lunchtime i would go over and visit the children and eat with them and
85
see what they were doing and they had wonderful they had things like gardens and lots of pets and just they had a four to one uh teacher student ratio so that that sort of and all most of the teachers had degrees um
86
87
88
yeah
89
five hundred dollars a week for two kids that's incredible
90
91
92
yeah it was incredible actually but it was good i mean it was it was at that time there were two children and they were in special programs and each one was a little over two hundred a week and then in addition i paid a little bit extra
93
94
95
oh oh
96
97
98
but the kids were i mean they really had some great opportunities but that what you were alluding to earlier is you know women who work for minimal wage and
99
100
101
well
102
well
103
yeah
104
105
106
and and really have to feel they have to put their children sometimes they do put them in uh fairly low paying situations situations
107
108
109
you know they could
110
uh somebody will have a job at three hundred a week to get off welfare and you know and that's a good starting wage but boy three hundred dollars a week doesn't go very far on child care
111
112
113
uh-huh
114
um-hum
115
no even that
116
that really i think i don't it's been awhile since i've looked at my youngest child is eight so it's been a little while since i've looked into actually day care centers but they are you know the good ones do cost maybe sixty dollars a week since and so
117
118
119
120
121
i mean we used to pay pay fifty cents an hour to babysit but mine mine are twenty two twenty three and twenty seven so you know that i guess babysitters now are up at what five dollars an hour
122
123
124
um-hum
125
um-hum
126
something like
127
128
129
oh my
130
131
132
133
134
well you know but you made the comment earlier why would someone be interested in children i mean it has been a real um there there have been some good entrepreneurial type experiences and i think
135
i think they have captured a certain market again but but then there are babysitting groups as a pediatrician one of the things we've been real concerned about is the infections as you start putting lots of little kids together the infection rates that go around and
136
137
138
um-hum
139
oh yeah
140
141
142
143