There is also a meet and greet in Brampton on Tuesday. It is at Boston Pizza, Steeles and Kennedy from 6:30 to 8:30. So any Brampton area providers, please come out to meet Lisa!
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There is also a meet and greet in Brampton on Tuesday. It is at Boston Pizza, Steeles and Kennedy from 6:30 to 8:30. So any Brampton area providers, please come out to meet Lisa!
Hey! Great! What's the exact address?
The address is 65 Resolution Drive. It is in the Walmart plaza.
Yes cfred just realized i did not put the address in it is at my co-op in the community room at 10 Elsinore Path
Thanks Kar. I was more asking about the Brampton one as T had asked me to call some Montessori schools for Tuesday's event. She's done it already though....sucks that everything was closed today though! Might be a small crowd.
What is the CURRENT penalty if one is looking after 6 instead of 5 children
Not sure. You're never allowed to have 6 kids at the same time, any time. I'm not sure what they do....you should probably have a look at the DNA. I think they make you call the parent of the extra child for pick up, but don't quote me on it. Or are you talking about having 6 kids in total but only 5 at one time? You can have as many kids as you want enrolled, but only 5 can attend at any given time. Daycare insurance will only cover 5 children, maximum.
I want to say a fine of $2000/day of every day they can prove you've been over, and forcing you to shut down for 2 weeks, if it is a first offence, and then random spot checks for a while afterwards to make sure you never have more than 5....but I can't find it online!! I've had so much info about the current laws and new laws and legalese in my brain for so long it's getting jumbled, so I could be TOTALLY off-base....but I believe it's a fine of a certain amount per day, and then shutting the provider down for a specific amount of time.
And cfred is right, that is all for a provider caring for 6 children AT ONE TIME...you could have 20 children enrolled if you wanted to, as long as they never overlapped to give you more than 5 at a time.
And currently, a provider's own children don't count in that total of 5. I say it only because I've got 3 of my own, so when everyone's here and we're doing the school run, for example, I've got 8 kids with me, and I'm sure people wonder.
I was just about to add that CrazyEight.....$2000/day sticks in my mind as well.
Thanks cfred, maybe I'm not completely nuts! :)
How many caregiver's do you think will follow the new rules. 2 under 2, 3 over 2. Most of us, all have children within the age of 12 to 18 months, it's rare that you will receive an inquiry for an older child unless it's a family with 2 siblings returning from mat leave. I will not have that age come January, I will have a child almost 3. There will be lots of parents without childcare who have 12 months old children.
Exactly....I have refused inquiries for 1 year olds in the last month! No idea where these people are going....The daycare centre in the area has a 6 month waiting at least they said.
6 month waiting list is short in comparison to many I know of. They say at least 12-18 months. People are getting on the waiting list within a couple of months of conceiving because they are worried they won't get into a centre. The ratios are being changed in centres to "apparently" accommodate the increased need. Not sure how that makes things safer, especially in a sector that notoriously has a higher incident rate than the independent home daycare provider. So much for their licensing keeping the kids safer. Lets just add a few more kids per adult and things will be just fine :rolleyes:
I originally started doing daycare in a city that was saturated with providers. I never really had an issue filling spots as it was highly populated but when I moved to a smaller town, 15,000, it was a different story. There were only 3 providers advertising between dcbear, kijiji and online websites. I know there were about 10 providers or thereabouts through word of mouth. I kid you not I had at least 6 enquiries a week at one point because of the shortage of providers. As a result within a year or so of being here, dcbear had 27 providers advertising if I recall correctly. Upon researching, nearly all of these additions were moms who decided to stay at home because of the difficulty in finding care, let alone good care, and I think this is what will happen when Bill 10 comes in. More and more families will be forced to stay home and to be able to do so financially, they will open their homes as daycares until their children go to school full time. This will help to a point but I worry about how many of those newbies will not know the rules, especially as googling brings up such a mish mash of info which isn't always accurate. This is why licensing is so important.
I would become licensed if it paid. I live in a small community outside Ottawa, if I become licensed with the Municipality of Prescott, Russell they would pay me $29.00 a day. All new clients now are $38.00 a day. When, I lived in Ottawa there was a few agencies Tot Lot, Wee Watch, if Tot Lot was in Limoges, I would make probably the same rate as I charge. This is not about the rates, going off topic a little, become licensed where I live would affect my income. I have noticed that there is a few more caregiver's that have surfaces in the last 6 months. You are absolutely right, they probably don't know the new rules. They are also charging $25.00 per day which drives me absolutely crazy.
I have a question:
I'm reading that children up to age 13 now count into daycare numbers, but the daycare provider's children over 6 don't?
So, for hypothetical example, I could have 2,3,5,10, and 12 year old daycare children plus my own children aged 6, 8, and 10?
Am I understanding that correctly?
Yes. Once your own kids are 6, they no longer count in your numbers. The example that you gave would be perfectly legal, as you don't have more than 2 under 2, and your dckids up to age 13 are now counting as a spot.
There is no option to become a licensed individual home daycare provider in the province of Ontario pink so I'm not sure what you are referring too as being with a licensed agency makes you an agency provider but not a licensed one. The agency is the one with the license. I think there needs to be legal licensing for all providers as a means of setting a minimum standard and keeping track of these professionals. I however don't think it should be with an agency and with profit as the number one goal. I'm not saying it should be for free either but with the main objective being to maintain some kind of safety standards and have resources for the providers. Not a simple task setting this up as so many won't be happy with the rules.