Thanks Mike
I was not aiming my comments at you personally. I am NOT bitter I am concerned :)
It is the situation caused by this Government I am frightened by.
I really do have an extremely professional & friendly attitude to parents and all human beings, but the sector are being taken for a ride again.
Child carers have right to a decent living, as does Carolyn;
"I'm a registered childminder and I haven't increased my daily fees in three years! One parent still pays the same daily rate as she did 8 years ago. What about my pay keeping up with inflation? Most parents know nothing about EYFS and practitioners still don't know what the implications are. Are parents going to pay us what we need to impliment this curriculum? I don't think so!!"
Professional status - on low wages ? Now let me see ....... oh yes Gordon Brown has very big pockets - tax us more and we can pay for it ourselves. Cynical, I know, but 10p band affects low paid workers!
I also had two children in Nursery in Cambridge - before vouchers, tax credit, childcare credit and had no help whatsoever with my choice of childcare cost - I too got on with it just to exist! Times have changed and regulations have been piled on - which is a good thing in the long term.
As parents we all have a choice - child care providers have a choice - but settings seem to have no choice about what is being prescribed to them in the form of never ending hoops to jump through - National Standards, QA, Local Agreements, EYFS, Designated Person Training, Refreshers - it is all good but small independent settings surely cannot sustain this, yes local authorities provide some funds - but who should pay? Taxpayers pay for schools to educate, child care is not school - just where will this EYFS end? Up to age 6?
If I worked full time training would be in the day during office hours. I work part time to care for my family - my choice - my choice also to take a part time job in child care. Not my choice to be gadding off everywhere doing so much training - especially when I spent two years doing a NVQ L3 which now, three years on, seems worthless. Not a settings choice to have visits out of hours from local government officers, which then means paying more and more administration costs. voluntary Management Committe Members also work full time ( true for preschools too).
Wages will always be the biggest outlay for childcare - some parents pay £5 - £6 per hour for an unqualified baby sitter in their own home in the evening, so please accept that a club, nursery, creche, preschool, MUST CHARGE MORE per hour. Some settings session fees broken down to hourly rates amount to far less than a baby sitting rate.
We have so far managed to maintain a very low charge for Out Of School Care because overheads were relatively low - but - increased professional status must mean higher bills for end users - parents - unless child care is allocated government funding across the board and not just for training, especially if expectedto go on to degree level - investing in people?
Something else which is evident is that more and more families have a parent working from home, working flexi hours, shifts etc.. and so Out of School settings are losing full time, every day bookings.The numbers of ad hoc, casual bookings has greatly increased - but where is the security and predictability, being able to plan ahead is difficult.