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  1. #1
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    I think what it boils down to is that if one does nothing, one achieves nothing. Will we get anything that we want? Maybe....probably not. BUT, one important thing we've done in the process of this fight is shed light on it. Public awareness is critical in any cause and in that regard, we've done extremely well. CICPO is all over the news broadcasts, articles, radio shows, social media, etc, etc. We've brought a cause that, before our fight, no one really knew anything about, right to the forefront. In my opinion, the secrecy in which this has been put together is disgraceful. We've brought it to the forefront, educated thousands and given unity and a voice to providers all over the province. That in itself is fantastic! I've watched all the media go from flat out condemning us to now giving us balanced, fair and factual stories. Lucy Lopez had me in a gem of a blunder in my interview for CBC news...I really buggered it up. She didn't use the part to work against us......6 months ago, it would have been used for sure! In the end, it was a balanced piece, to my great relief. Even Lizzy herself changed her tune toward the end. She's still a heinous hag, BUT she heard us...loud and clear. We've even garnered the assistance of the Ombudsman himself, which is beyond cool! We have a little clout and the ear of the media (to some degree). Given that we just started up in July, that's quite remarkable. But the best part is that we're unified and striving toward one cause. I believe this will carry forward beyond this fight. Even if we don't win this battle, we've still won...if ya know what I mean. So yes, Rachael, change IS good! But I'll be damned if I'm going to be complacent. Nothing is gained with complacency.....too many great things come out of a good fight
    Last edited by cfred; 11-26-2014 at 10:06 AM.

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  3. #2
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    I'm honestly really surprised about comments saying change is inevitable and that laws are changed without input all the time and no one cares. Just because it happens all the time doesn't make it ok.

    Sure, things change all the time but that doesn't mean we should just bend over and take it.

    CFred, Heidi, Kim, Veronica, Tracey and so many others can look in the mirror everyday with pride and know that they did their best for something they believed in with all their hearts, regardless of the outcome.

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  5. #3
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    "No big deal"???? Are you kidding me???

    Maybe in the grand scheme of things, "it will all settle," but tell that to the actual providers and families who's lives are about to get turned upside down.

    I live in a working-class, low-income, small city in Ontario. My Arts degree in European Studies and German is completely useless here, but my husband's job is here, so we are stuck. My youngest will already count in my numbers, and we had planned on one more baby sometime next fall. If I continue that plan and refuse to let my government dictate my family size, then I will have to terminate 2 clients. I will be forced to run on 60% of my barely-minimum-wage-already income for 3 more years. My business will essentially be in the toilet. I will be working 10 hour days for under 20 grand a year. However, daycare costs, even just for my existing three children, would be that amount themselves. So to be better off, I need to walk into an entry-level job that offers straight day shifts and pays at least 40 grand a year. Please, tell me where I'm supposed to find that. I don't have "other options" available to me. This was a career born out of necessity.

    I am ONE example of thousands and thousands of providers across this province. My clients have nowhere else to go in this school district. They cannot afford higher fees. They are a few examples of an even bigger number of families that will be affected.

    To say nothing of rural Ontario, where there are very few centers and in a lot of places, no agencies either. They rely on ICP's almost exclusively, and now ICP's are about to be forced to terminate spaces.

    Rachael, how can you be so nonchalant in saying that people with multiple young children "simply won't decide to open their own business, they will have one less option"?? Exactly how many other options do you think there are?

    I realize you think that the laws here were unfair to begin with, and I realize that providers in other provinces have figured out a way to make ends meet with harsher restrictions. But that is not the point. Regardless on whether or not they were right or fair or whatever other word you want to use, Ontario has been running with these ratios for decades. Providers, myself included, have planned our families around the current laws. Thousands of providers have bought large homes with separate daycare spaces, for example, have planned the number and spacing of their children, have made huge, life-altering decisions based on the CURRENT ratios, and now are faced with trying to figure out how to fix the damage that has already been done. They can't magically go back in time and have less kids or space them further apart. They can't just pick up and move to a city with more job opportunities. They can't go back in time and decide NOT to buy that bigger house, NOT to spend money on renovations for daycare, NOT to upgrade their schooling with ECE courses, etc etc etc. Those choices were made years ago based on the current ratios, and the damage from them has already been done.

    These are people's livelihoods at stake, that the government has thrown away. I'll be damned if I'm going to sit back and allow a bunch of corrupt politicians throw my career under the bus in order to cover their own asses, and do nothing about it. I'm going to fight for all the providers and families that will run out of options after this law goes through, because then I can at least look myself in the eye in the morning.

    Please keep the actual people that this will hurt in mind before simply brushing off such monumental changes in legislation as no big deal. Change is only good if it is going to improve the lives of everyone it affects, and this will only improve the pocketbooks of agencies and the government.

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  7. #4
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    Rachael, how can you be so nonchalant in saying that people with multiple young children "simply won't decide to open their own business, they will have one less option"?? Exactly how many other options do you think there are?

    I realize you think that the laws here were unfair to begin with, and I realize that providers in other provinces have figured out a way to make ends meet with harsher restrictions. But that is not the point. Regardless on whether or not they were right or fair or whatever other word you want to use, Ontario has been running with these ratios for decades. Providers, myself included, have planned our families around the current laws. Thousands of providers have bought large homes with separate daycare spaces, for example, have planned the number and spacing of their children, have made huge, life-altering decisions based on the CURRENT ratios, and now are faced with trying to figure out how to fix the damage that has already been done. They can't magically go back in time and have less kids or space them further apart. They can't just pick up and move to a city with more job opportunities. They can't go back in time and decide NOT to buy that bigger house, NOT to spend money on renovations for daycare, NOT to upgrade their schooling with ECE courses, etc etc etc. Those choices were made years ago based on the current ratios, and the damage from them has already been done.

    These are people's livelihoods at stake, that the government has thrown away. I'll be damned if I'm going to sit back and allow a bunch of corrupt politicians throw my career under the bus in order to cover their own asses, and do nothing about it. I'm going to fight for all the providers and families that will run out of options after this law goes through, because then I can at least look myself in the eye in the morning.
    Because that's life.

    Jobs come and go. Companies come and go.

    I came to Canada planning to be a stay-at-home parent based on my husband's $100k+ job. Guess what? He died when we had been here less than a year and before his life insurance covered him.
    That plan didn't work out and so we adapted.
    We ALL make life altering choices and plans based on CURRENT situations and none of us can go back in time and change them. We have a term for that - it's called LIFE.

    When people opt to have a family, they have to consider if they can afford that. This is a simple fact regardless of how that family sources their income. There are lots and lots of people who due to the taxes they pay, the cost of living in their area, the income levels who have to decide that they cannot afford to have another child.

    The mere fact you consider you should be protected from that when no other industry is, is ludicrous.

    We all plan our families around our current financial situation. It's laughable that you would think that isn't the case. However, companies fold, people get laid off, and it's life. It sucks but it's life.

    Everyone also buys their home based on the income they have and expect to continue to have but again, life doesn't come with a promise that income will be protected.

    I appreciate that this might have been a career born out of necessity - trust me, it was for me too. But shit happens and it happens to everyone not an exclusive sub-group of the community. People get divorced and their income decreases, people have medical emergencies and there income decreases, the list goes on and on.

    As said in an earlier post, there is time to figure out a plan which is a luxury compared to some events that others face. Sure, you might need to get a second job - been there, done that, had months were I finished day care and hopped in the car to drive across the city for a 6 hour shift elsewhere when my numbers were low and my income didn't cover the mortgage. Much like the situation you might be facing in a year's time. There are people whose change in circumstance means downsizing - at least you will have the asset to enable you to consider that option too if you now feel your house is too big for your future needs.

    I don't mean to sound brazen - I guess I've been dealt enough crappy hands to deal with the reality of a situation vs sobbing about what is lost.

    The facts remain that you have been aware of this likely change for a while and now you know it's probably time to plan for that becoming reality. But lines along those where you were hoping to have a 4th child when most people don't get the opportunity of three, seem bizarrely selfish.

    Bottom line, you now know you might not be able to afford to continue adding to your family. It sucks but it's a reality most adult Canadian's face. Bottom line, your business won't be taking the long term plan you hoped but again, it's a reality most small business owners also have to face.

    It really isn't the end of the World. I promise when you wake up tomorrow, the world will still be turning. I can also promise you that it will all settle.

    A lower income than hoped for/expected/planned for is hardly a situation that thousands before you haven't had to face with far less notice.

    It's not your disappointment that I can't relate to - but it's the way you feel you should be exempt from situations that most other citizens of this country have to face and it's the tone of entitlement that you deserve the future to be smooth sailing and for guarantees that your income will never be adversely affected by things not in your control. That's not living in the real world. Sorry but it isn't.

    Life has dealt you a hand you hoped it wouldn't. How you deal with it, is entirely up to you.
    Last edited by Rachael; 11-26-2014 at 02:06 PM.

  8. #5
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    I find it odd Rachael how you can be so nonchalant about people losing their jobs, houses and livelihoods yet should anyone dare ask an innocent question about claiming income you won't hesitate to chew them up and spit them out.

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  10. #6
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    Quote Originally Posted by Fun&care View Post
    I find it odd Rachael how you can be so nonchalant about people losing their jobs, houses and livelihoods yet should anyone dare ask an innocent question about claiming income you won't hesitate to chew them up and spit them out.
    That's okay - I find it odd you can bawl out someone for stating their strong views about people working under the table (i.e. committing a criminal offence) and accuse them of bullying yet find it okay to make passive aggressive comments when their views don't agree with yours.

    As said, I don't mean to be brazen but Ontario have had ratios well above anyone else's for far longer. When other provinces ratios were reduced, the providers of that time had to adjust - just as the Ontario providers will have to now.

    Like when the papermills here close, those who bought houses based on their incomes which having worked their for generations, they expected to continue.

    It's life. Nothing is forever. Sure it sucks when people lose jobs, houses, income but Ontario's day care providers are hardly the only people in this situation.

    I guess I'm more of a person who deals with it vs whining incessantly. There's a whole year to plan for this change.

    I've voiced my views. I'll duck out of this thread since you feel I'm not entitled to have one. Whatever. I just don't think it's as disastrous as many of the woe-is-me crowd believe it is.

    Nothing is forever. Nothing. Adapt or die, is the phrase. But it's hardly a case that no one but Ontario providers have faced and it's the overwhelming tone that they are the only victims of life that grates on the rest of us who are already living this reality.

    Bottom line - this is a day care forum where either everyone is in Ontario and dealing with it themselves or everyone has already had to make the life adaptions of a smaller home, smaller family, etc because this profession doesn't provide for 3+ children and a home the size we would wish for. Although of course we are all sympathetic to you having to face the change, it's tough to think of you as victims but more so the group who won the lottery years ago and are now whining it wasn't the 'set for life' prize.
    Last edited by Rachael; 11-26-2014 at 03:22 PM.

  11. #7
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    That is one high horse you are sitting on. Why even comment on this thread in the first place if you don't agree with us or have anything to add to the conversation? Why do you have such a strong need to voice how much you don't care about what's going on in Ontario?

    I sure hope no one ever tells YOU to adapt or die next time you are going through something difficult.

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    Quote Originally Posted by Fun&care View Post
    That is one high horse you are sitting on. Why even comment on this thread in the first place if you don't agree with us or have anything to add to the conversation? Why do you have such a strong need to voice how much you don't care about what's going on in Ontario?

    I sure hope no one ever tells YOU to adapt or die next time you are going through something difficult.
    LMAO - Back at you, cupcake!

    This is a forum. For discussion. For many views to be expressed. You might wish that everyone nods in agreement and hands you a Kleenex but again, that's not reality. Do you really want to belong to a forum where people pretend to agree with you or stay mute when they don't, or do you want to actually consider people other than yourself for once maybe? If you want to surround yourself by yes-people who will just nod and agree and pat your back until you feel better, go home and visit your Mummy but here, adults with varying views are just as entitled to state them as you are.

    Why do I have such a strong voice about what's happening in Ontario? Because this is a National Forum where some members have had an elitist existence for so long yet expect the rest of the country to be pitiful. It's the self-entitlement train which provokes reactions.

    Don't try and twist words and make out you have been victimised again by the adapt or die comment. You know perfectly well is wasn't an instruction but a reference to a phase which came about from a quote. If you fail to understand the meaning of it, you pretend to be fairly intelligent, look it up before playing the victim card again. Your failure to do so, it's merely that - your failure.

    It's life. Your circumstances have changed. Adapt to them or quit, curl up in a ball, and whine about how much you are a victim of circumstances beyond your control.
    Last edited by Rachael; 11-26-2014 at 04:07 PM.

  13. #9
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    Lol expressing your opinion...it seems that to you it's about coming up on top and anyone who disagrees with you is a whiny, self entitled baby who needs tissues.

    You could have said your peace and left it at that. THAT is expressing an opinion. Now you are just trying to shove your opinion down our throats. We've all heard it- you don't care. The rest of us who DO care are going to continue to discuss this.

    As a side note, I don't know what picture you have in your head about providers in Ontario but I don't understand how people who are struggling to make ends meet and then losing their jobs counts as self-entitlement and whining. I don't think anyone goes into this biz to make big bucks and eat cake while the peasants eat crumbs...Like.... Awwwww yea-we providers in ontario be livin' large!
    Last edited by Fun&care; 11-26-2014 at 04:51 PM.

  14. #10
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    Quote Originally Posted by Fun&care View Post
    Lol expressing your opinion...it seems that to you it's about coming up on top and anyone who disagrees with you is a whiny, self entitled baby who needs tissues.

    You could have said your peace and left it at that. THAT is expressing an opinion. Now you are just trying to shove your opinion down our throats. We've all heard it- you don't care. The rest of us who DO care are going to continue to discuss this.

    As a side note, I don't know what picture you have in your head about providers in Ontario but I don't understand how people who are struggling to make ends meet and then losing their jobs counts as self-entitlement and whining. I don't think anyone goes into this biz to make big bucks and eat cake while the peasants eat crumbs...Like.... Awwwww yea-we providers in ontario be livin' large!
    Surely even you can see the double-standard irony of that statement.

    I haven't stop you from discussing it unlike you who feels I should be able to express my opinion. If I may remind you, you called me out on my opinions (in your whiny voice) and I responded.

    You state you are struggling to make ends meet - well if you need help reading the whole thread get some - the whole country is struggling on smaller numbers that you will have even after this amendment gets introduced. As I stated, when that's the case, most adults have to consider how they will adjust (that's like adapt).

    Based on the comments some options would be to sell up and downsize since it's recognized that the houses bought for the current number of children will no longer be required.

    Get a second job - Did you know that many inhome day care providers in the East have a second business because day care doesn't cover the cost of essentials?

    Cut some other household expenses.

    It's is self-entitled whining when it's audio noise and no action to resolve. You've identified challenges and issue so do something other than complain about how tough it's gonna be. Voice noise ain't gonna pay those bills.

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