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  1. #1

    Closing a daycare

    If you were going to close your home daycare how would you do it?

    Email, personal conversation (in front of the kids at picks up) or letter?

    How much notice?

    Would you give a soft close and hard close date... in case your clients have trouble finding care?

    Would you give the exact reason or no reason at all?

    Thanks, looking forward to your feedback.

  2. #2
    Euphoric !
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    I've never closed up but if I were....

    Personal conversation with a letter in hand. Would have a brief conversation with parent at pick up or drop off time (whichever is less busy) and hand them the letter to read at home in greater detail.

    I'd likely give 3 month's notice if I could. If it was due to an emergency than as much notice as possible but life happens and parents in hdc's take the risk of potentially not having daycare in a very short notice.

    Again, depends on the situation. If it was for an emergency than yes a hard close date. If I was able, I would accommodate for as long as possible if it didn't disrupt my future plans.

    I'd give the exact reason most likely. I'm pretty open and honest.

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  4. #3
    Euphoric !
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    I would do as 5littlemonkeys said. I would be honest to a point e.g if my husband applied for a job in another city and got it, I might tell them he got a promotion/was transferred

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  6. #4
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    I would prob give 2 months notice , there's alot of providers out there and I don't think it would be that hard for dcp to find replacements . I would def do a hard close as some parents might just take advantage , and you might be stuck with just one child for awhile . I'm not sure I would give the reason I guess it would depend on what it was , if my husband was transferred I prob would but if I was just wanting to be done I prob wouldn't advise .
    Last edited by Secondtimearound; 09-09-2014 at 03:15 PM.

  7. #5
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    Can only answer what I think I'd most likely do as I've not actually ever done it.

    I would likely write a letter but tell them in person. The purpose of the letter would be to detail the pertinent information, when, why, how, etc. I think I'd feel I owe it to my clients to tell them in person, and I'd imagine their heads would start spinning about their future child care. Although they might ask questions, I'm not sure how much information they would hear as their minds would be filled with so much. The letter would clarify details once the initial shock had worn off.

    I would avoid stating it in front of the children - so it might be a phone call in the evenings if that's not possible at pick up/collection. Children don't belong in adult conversations anyway but I would allow their parents to find some solutions and choose when to share the information with their child. If you tell the parents in front of the children, it removes their ability to reassure the child with facts and all they can offer is supposition.

    How much notice - As much as possible. I would think it's far to double your notice period as a minimum. I would also be tempted to have reached out to local providers I respect and if they have vacancies, I would pass their contact information to the parents as someone I'd recommend.

    Check how your contracts are worded. Mine say "either party may terminate for any reason with one month's written notice. Fees are due regardless of attendance during the notice period". So I'd give mine two months if closing, I'd be willing to work an extra weeks or so (depending on reasons for closing) if someone has yet to find alternative care but I wouldn't necessarily announce that from the beginning. I'm lucky in the sense I've always managed open communication so I think in this situation, someone who is struggling to find care, would likely have told me and I'd know if their reasons were valid or resistance. I could then decide if I would extend the closure for a couple of weeks for their child.

    In terms of reason - it depends how personal it was. If the reasons are personal and you aren't ready to share, a general statement that your personal situation has changed and you are needed elsewhere, is sufficient. Don't feel obligated to share more detail that you wish to. You don't have to answer every question people ask.

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