Beyond Nannies: How the Recession May Be Changing Child Care
The Washington Post ran a story yesterday on the "nanny glut" and it caught our attention -- partly for what it didn't say. Turns out that the recession has led many families to let go of their nannies, usually because mom or dad no longer have a job or their work hours were cut. Then the story took an interesting tack, suggesting that this was a boon for relatively well-off, working parents. As the story reported, parents can finally be choosy about which nanny they hire, instead of having to beg and scrounge to find the right person.
Nanny stories are always fun to read -- I was among the throngs who gulped down The Nanny Diaries when it came out in 2002 -- but are we alone here in feeling that there was something missing from the Post's treatment of this issue? For instance: How is the recession affecting less well-off families, those who are either finding their paychecks shrinking or who were never quite making enough money to pay for a nanny in the first place?
Other questions that are on our mind as we continue to learn about the depth of the recession and its impact on children:
1) Anecdotally we are hearing that enrollment is down at child care centers and in afterschool programs. Where are these children going? And are child care centers having to lay off staff as a result? Who are they choosing to lay off first -- staff members with relatively little experience? Or the ones with higher education levels and more training who typically have higher salaries and are therefore more expensive for child care centers to employ?
2) How are grandparents getting involved -- and do they really want to be suddenly taking care of young children for hours a day? Fran Simon, the chief of parent engagement at the National Association for Child Care Resource & Referral Agencies, has been hearing more stories of children being left with grandma. This could be great or terrible for children, depending on how engaged grandparents really want to be in the day-to-day work of raising children.
3) City pools, libraries and shopping malls: These are the spots where many desperate parents leave their young school-age children in the summer. What kind of burden is this placing on these settings? Who is watching the kids? (And are older siblings in charge of the younger ones?) For purposes of policy, the use of informal settings like these makes it very hard to track where children end up and how many need better child care.
4) Are parents redirecting their children to unregulated centers and family-based home settings? Simon of NACCRRA worries about this because the quality of care can be much lower in such settings. We do too.
5) Will the au pair program see a boost in interest? The "On Parenting" blog of WashingtonPost.com ran a helpful post today about the program, which for parents is a cross between a cultural exchange program and hiring a nanny. Au pairs come from other countries to stay with families for a year or two, learning English and taking college courses while helping to take care of young children for up to 45 hours a week. Many parents consider it to be more affordable childcare -- though because it requires a family to have a home big enough to house a boarder, it's typically out of reach for many working-class families.
As the summer unfolds we at Early Ed Watch will keep our eyes open for data and stories that can give us a better sense of exactly how families are coping with the child care conundrum in this down economy. Drop us a line if you know of sources we should be tapping.
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Some sources!
Maybe if you had any recent experience in a school or with school age kids you would realize that many, many families don't have childcare, never did, and never will because it is expensive, crappy and difficult logistically.
Also, many families don't have grandparents around, nor do they care much about the au pair wars (many wouldn't know an au pair if you threw the dear at them).
I suggest that you do some actual research; get up, get into an inner city school (volunteer to tutor!) and then write your articles.
Families in need do not need nannies. They need money, security, stability, crime-free neighborhoods, good food, early childhood education, transportation, health care, and an end to what causes all the preceding: poverty.
Fix poverty. Forget the nannies.
What about a living wage?
I too read the WaPo front page story on how families can now be picky about hiring their nanny and have the upper hand in salary negotiations.
Three questions immediately come to mind:
1. Why were these families not being picky in the first place? Is it too much trouble to have standards, interview multiple candidates, check references and do background screening?
2. A parent reported "Before, I felt like they were interviewing us. . . ." - I have news for this mom. Interviewing is a two way street. Both parties should be assessing the job, benefits, compensation, environment etc. for a good fit. The nanny who DOESN'T assess but just leaps at an offer will generally live to regret it - and be looking for work again. Clearly turnover is not what the parents have in mind, is it?
3. Are parents so little invested in their employee, the nanny that will be caring for their children unsupervised for 8 - 10 hours at a stretch, that they are excited to offer a mere $300 a week for a nanny/maid? In DC, most of these parents vote Democrat and would argue voraciously for universal heath care at a cocktail party, but are excited that they can pay below minimum wage for their child care provider? Am I the only one who sees the hypocrisy here?
Home-based child care
"...unregulated centers and family-based home settings? Simon of NACCRRA worries about this because the quality of care can be much lower in such settings."
Can be lower, certainly, but can often be higher. Abuses can happen more easily when there is no regulation, but parents can monitor such things themselves more easily in a home-based center, the home-based centers often have fewer children and better ratios. And you usually know exactly who is caring for your child. I know people who have what they call a nanny-share arrangement (2 families with 3 children) which is home-based care limited to 3 children.
quality early childhood care for all
Please make it clear that you are not grouping all family home day care providers with the "unregulated centers and family-based home settings" that you describe as being of lower quality.
Family home day care providers can be registered and licensed and have as much or more training in early childhood education as teachers at preschools and day care centers. Many are members of NAEYC!
Great questions about how the recession is affecting children--I look forward to hearing more. With several our city pools closed due to lack of funding, the remaining ones will see more use. Children as young as 7 can stay all day without an adult--not quality early childhood care.