I have to make decisions every day. But today Im making a tough one. I know that one of my parents like that I keep low ratios. She allowed me to care for her son because I had low ratios. Even after I took in two more children, she kept him here. She even wanted to hire me on as a nanny for her son. She is expecting a second child in September. The big decision that Im making really is a financial one for us. My oldest son is 14 now and in the state of Virginia, he can be a legal "helper" to me now. Im going to "hire" him and pay him for Summer work. Once the school year rolls around in September, I wont be over ratio anyway so I wont need to hire anyone else. What I know is that when I hire my son, I want to take in one more child to be AT my ratio. Six. She isnt going to like that and she's probably going to quit. What Ive come to grips with is this: Its my business. I love children to death but this job also pays my bills. If the legal ratio is 1:6 and Im within that, she can choose not to like it but I dont have to care what she thinks. We need the extra money right now and Im not breaking any laws. My son helping me is just a perk for the Summertime and puts some money in his pocket. I have to start putting my foot down and not make decision that wont tick off my parents......
Making Tough Decisions
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I have to make decisions every day. But today Im making a tough one. I know that one of my parents like that I keep low ratios. She allowed me to care for her son because I had low ratios. Even after I took in two more children, she kept him here. She even wanted to hire me on as a nanny for her son. She is expecting a second child in September. The big decision that Im making really is a financial one for us. My oldest son is 14 now and in the state of Virginia, he can be a legal "helper" to me now. Im going to "hire" him and pay him for Summer work. Once the school year rolls around in September, I wont be over ratio anyway so I wont need to hire anyone else. What I know is that when I hire my son, I want to take in one more child to be AT my ratio. Six. She isnt going to like that and she's probably going to quit. What Ive come to grips with is this: Its my business. I love children to death but this job also pays my bills. If the legal ratio is 1:6 and Im within that, she can choose not to like it but I dont have to care what she thinks. We need the extra money right now and Im not breaking any laws. My son helping me is just a perk for the Summertime and puts some money in his pocket. I have to start putting my foot down and not make decision that wont tick off my parents......- Flag
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Your business - Your rules. You can run it as you see fit. Besides, daycare, like any business grows and evolves as you are in it longer and gain experience, or have life changes etc. Does anyone begrudge Sears or Walmart for growing? No, they don't. Why is daycare any different? One would think a parent would see the VALUE in having a daycare provider that not only could manage to put in the time committment and interest in keeping her daycare business running for all these years but who wants to expand and grow. THAT is good business and shows your committment. You are not stagnant and want to improve.
If she's not okay with it then let her go. You can't please everyone and please yourself.- Flag
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Wow, she would never come to my daycare 1:12! LOL I do have a helper for the summer now however! It is your buisness and your decision and your bills that need to be paid! 1:6 is definately manageable and she has nothing to complain about, but if she doesn't like it she can certainly go somewhere else and there is more fish in the sea for you! Do what works best for you! : )- Flag
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Do what is best for your family. If she likes/trusts you enough to want to hire you as a nanny and would still quit just because you add one more child, then she NEEDS to find a nanny because a home daycare wont please her. I wouldnt worry about it and just move on with your business with or without her.- Flag
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I agree that you have to do what's best for you, your family and your business...with possibly an explanation to your current clients, but certainly not an apology. I understand your concern though - but she should be able to trust by now that her child continues to receive the same quality of care with you.
I now make it one of my *disclaimer* points in interviews with prospective clients, that the group that I have that day, may not be the same group that I have when they enroll - because situations change in our business (both mine and my clients) - and I encourage prospective families to make their decision based on the **provider** not the **group** and they have to trust their provider to know what they can handle. I go on to explain that I know other providers that can't handle 3 kids...and others that handle 12 perfectly well. (That always gets me the deer-in-the-headlights-stare from parents that come into the interview STUCK on the issue of the number of kids on a roster)::
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You need to do what you feel is best for you and your business.
I started as unlicensed taking my neighbors 2 boys plus my own 3. Here I am 21 years later, licensed at the highest fcc level at 2:14. My program has involved over the years also from 'babysitting' to 'child care'; from using my formal living/dining room upstairs to a dedicated walkout space now with a separate entrance.
Always took my currently enrolled families into consideration when making policy changes, but you have to remember that those families won't be there forever and in most cases they don't make their family decisions based on what is best for you.- Flag
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Thanks you guys!
I did explain to her one time when she said that she couldnt handle that many kids (up to 6) that that is why she doesnt do it for a living. People who CAN do it, DO do it! I wouldnt be able to go into a restaurant and work 15 tables at a time because I have never done it before so I wouldnt be expected to but I understand that there are people who can do that. Thats why they get paid for that. Thats why I get paid for what I do. Because I can do it and not everyone can.
I dont think its because she doesnt trust me to care for that many, she just wants someone who can provide more one on one care for her son. She is due to have a baby in Sept so I would be losing that child as well. Im not dwelling over it anymore because I cant. I have a job to do and I have bills to pay. If she feels she can find someone who will hold her newborn all day and sit with only her son in her lap all day, more power to her! (She told me these things when she started with me two months ago)
Thanks again for the words of encouragement. I appreciate it. Its going to be hard to break the news to her that Im taking in another child but I have to do it. Probably today. I ran the ad already on Craigslist. I have butterflies. LOL.- Flag
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i am in the same situation. i have a 9 month old who started at 6 weeks, with only one other child here. of course mom loved that there were only two of them during the day, however, she was fully aware that i planned on filling up. now i am considering expanding and hiring an assistant. she had the nerve to tell me she "preferred" i didnt. like its her call...as much as i love her baby, i'm not going to not expand just cause she doesnt want me to. she can go get a personal nanny if she wants her child to have undivided attention.
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i am in the same situation. i have a 9 month old who started at 6 weeks, with only one other child here. of course mom loved that there were only two of them during the day, however, she was fully aware that i planned on filling up. now i am considering expanding and hiring an assistant. she had the nerve to tell me she "preferred" i didnt. like its her call...as much as i love her baby, i'm not going to not expand just cause she doesnt want me to. she can go get a personal nanny if she wants her child to have undivided attention.
I dont know whether I should tell her now before I get another child or until I get someone who responds to the ad and wants to come in for an interview. She will be required to put in a two-week notice but knowing her track record, she'll pay and just not bring him back if she finds someone else. Which is fine with me.- Flag
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So, how are you going to approach it? Just come right out and tell her that you are going to expand and when you plan on doing it?
I dont know whether I should tell her now before I get another child or until I get someone who responds to the ad and wants to come in for an interview. She will be required to put in a two-week notice but knowing her track record, she'll pay and just not bring him back if she finds someone else. Which is fine with me.Proverbs 12:1
A reminder to myself when I resist learning something new.- Flag
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Greenshadow, I think you are making the best decision for your business.
Funny that this parent who is soooo concerned about low ratios turns right around gets pregnant. Maybe that was her plan all along - she wanted to make sure that you had room for the new baby that they were planning.
I am fairly new at this so maybe I am not up on my provider etiquette, but I don't tell my current parents when I have a new family starting. I jsut wait until their paths cross and then I say "Oh, that's Little Johnny. He started last week." Is that wrong of me?
Pammie, I LOVE your disclaimer and I think that I will start doing that too!- Flag
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I agree Misol, I don't tell my parents when I have a new child coming. Not their business. It is amazing to me, how some parents think so much is their business (being nosy), when it is my business. Parents here have no say in what I do or how many children I care for, it is none of their business.- Flag
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