3.5k
Daycare and childcare providers in Winnipeg, Toronto, Vancouver, Ontario etc. in CanadaGarderies à Montréal ou au QuébecFind daycare or childcare providers in the USA
Forum control
+ Reply to Thread
Results 1 to 6 of 6

Thread: Rule breakers!

Hybrid View

  1. #1
    Outgoing
    Join Date
    Sep 2016
    Posts
    381
    Thanked
    78 Times in 74 Posts
    Hi.

    How frustrating. I always tell my clients what "payment by enrollment" means. During the first interview and give them also time to decide to go forward or not with this condition.

    I guess as they won't or do not want to pay. You can also keep their last "childcare receipt " until they pay their last fee.

    Small claims court will take time. You can even suggest to this family to ask other caregivers so they can realize that this is a norm. They have to pay with a child in attendance or not.

  2. #2
    Euphoric !
    Join Date
    Jan 2015
    Posts
    1,305
    Thanked
    487 Times in 369 Posts
    Quote Originally Posted by Peacefulbird View Post
    I guess as they won't or do not want to pay. You can also keep their last "childcare receipt " until they pay their last fee.
    Don't withhold their receipts. It's illegal. The consumers acts of each province will state that a consumer is legally entitled to a receipt for goods or services they have paid for. You have to issue the receipt for money paid (less anything owing of course) but don't with hold their receipt. Two wrongs don't make a right.

    Small claims court will take time. You can even suggest to this family to ask other caregivers so they can realize that this is a norm. They have to pay with a child in attendance or not.
    Small claims doesn't take long at all. A few weeks compared to debt collection. File your case. You'll get a date about 4-6 weeks in the future when you file and pay the fee. You then serve or have someone serve the other party. They have a set amount of time to respond if they wish. If they respond and accept all your statements as true, they admit guilt and you can bypass the hearing and get the judgement. If they don't respond or dispute your case, then it moves ahead. If either of you don't show, the other party will win by default so you must show up. Judge hears both sides. You get a decision there and then. Takes about 10 days for the Judge to write up his finding and issue the judgement.

    Send them a demand letter with a signed copy of their contract attached. Give them a fixed date or no more than 2 weeks away to settle in full. Let them know that failure to settle by that date will result in you filing your claim in court. At that stage, you will be seeking not just the debt but also the filing costs, any interest/late payment fees in your contract. Spell out that late payment fees from the time the debt was owed until court date is considerable. Let them know that in the event of you winning the case, a Judgment will be entered against them which can affect their credit rating for up to 6 years after settlement. Let them know that settling the debt in full is the cheapest way. Be prepared to actually follow up with a court filing if they don't pay.

  3. The Following User Says Thank You to Suzie_Homemaker For This Useful Post:


Similar Threads

  1. 2 under 2 rule question
    By DaycareMiss in forum Managing a daycare
    Replies: 4
    Last Post: 09-22-2017, 12:00 PM
  2. Deal Breakers
    By shopgirl in forum Opening a daycare
    Replies: 3
    Last Post: 08-04-2012, 03:34 PM

Posting Permissions

  • You may not post new threads
  • You may not post replies
  • You may not post attachments
  • You may not edit your posts

A few tips...

Do not hesitate to refer to this article to help you choose a daycare provider, know which questions to ask, have an idea of what to look for...
Did you know?
DaycareBear receives more than 155 700 unique pageviews each month; that's nearly 1.9 million pages per year!
Partner in your
search for a daycare provider