One upside to keeping a blog is that when I find myself in the midst of something even mildly hellish
I find some solace in the fact I will have something to write about. And so I
am compelled to share with you my recent experience of finding childcare. Anyone wondering why so few women return
to work after having children has obviously not spent any time on the phone to
the government departments responsible for family services. In my experience
even a quick conversation with any of those bodies is usually enough to zap the
will to live, let alone work.
I’m due to start a new job next week which
means, among other things, I will be relinquishing some of my parental duties.
Not in spirit, of course, but in body, at least, a few other adults will be
responsible for caring for the two lovely Misses in my life at certain times. This
is sensational for lots of reasons not the least of which is because for a
while there it looked like Miss I might be caring for Miss L. And that was
never going to end well.
As background, despite Miss L’s name being down at the
fantastic centre which Miss I attends since I was four months’ pregnant, there
is virtually no chance of her securing a single day there before 2014. I had
naively assumed Miss L would get a spot there so hadn’t put her name down at
too many other places. By which I mean, none. But, with that option off the
table, with a signed contract and a start date locked in I was forced to
quickly familiarise myself with every childcare facility within a 10 kilometre
radius of my home and my work.
I had versions of this conversation roughly 30 times.
Me: Hello I’m ringing to enquire about a
position for my 8 month old baby and am willing to bake you cakes every day for
the next month if you can give me even a glimmer of hope?
Them: Please fill out our waitlist application.
The current waiting period for babies under 12 months is 2 years.
Me: How does that work because by then my baby
would be 2 years and 8 months?
Them: Well that’s good because the average waiting
period for children over 2 is a lot shorter. She’ll get a spot much sooner
then.
Me: Well that’s good except I’m due to start work
in a few weeks when she will be 9 months old.
Them: The current waiting period for babies under
12 months is 2 years.
Me: Right. I see. Did you hear me promise you
cake????
Turns out not even cake helps. After having this
conversation too many times it looked like a nanny might be the only option.
Except I then did the maths and it quickly looked like that was not a
particularly viable option. Nannies charge between $20 and $30 an hour, so even
hiring a nanny for 8 hours a day, 4 days a week, would cost $800 a week after tax. At this point I contemplated becoming a nanny myself to get paid
quite decent money to do what I already do day-in day-out FOR FREE. That was
fleeting.
I then decided to investigate the circumstances in which the
childcare rebate is applicable to nannies. According to the various government
websites the childcare rebate is applicable to in-home carers in very limited
circumstances. (An in-home carer is essentially a nanny but nannies sound
expensive and luxurious so the government calls them ‘in-home carers’ and the
rules are they can mind children but do no housework. Actually I might try that
rule around here but I digress.) I rang to find out more.
Me: Hello, I’m just ringing to find out more about
the childcare rebate for in-home care.
Them: The childcare rebate is applicable to in-home
care in very limited circumstances.
Me: Yes, that’s what I keep reading. I’m quite
interested in what those circumstances might be?
Them: Very limited.
Me: Right. Are you able to shed any light on
what those ‘very limited circumstances’ might be?
Them: Well for a start you have to prove you
cannot access other childcare. Have you rung any centres?
Me: Yes, I have. I’ve called about 30 and there
are no positions and the average waiting period for a child under 12 months is very long. It's approximately two years which I still can’t get my head around but that's the way
it is.
Them: Well where do you live? I’ll have a look with
our search engine.
[I gave them our suburb which, for context, is
in Sydney’s east.]
Them: Right there’s a centre in Hunter’s Hill. Is
that near you?
Me: Ah no. That’s on the other side of the city.
Them: Well it’s less than 10 kilometres from you.
Me: Possibly as a crow flies it is but I’m not a
crow and I can’t fly. In driving terms it may as well be 20 kilometres. Driving
a child from my house to Hunter’s Hill would take over an hour and I’d then
have to double back to get to work. I could then probably sit down and write
one email before I’d then have to get back in the car. It’s not feasible.
Them: Ok what about Cremorne?
Me: Unfortunately again that’s not near where I
live or work.
Them: What
about Annandale?
Me: Unfortunately again that’s not near where I
live or work.
[This charade continued for a solid ten minutes.]
Me: Does your database show centres with
vacancies or just where centres are located?
Them: It just shows where they are. You’ll have to
call the centres individually to check vacancy.
Me: See the problem is even if I did live in
Hunter’s Hill or Cremorne or Epping or Annandale I’m certain there would be a
queue of adorable babies, or at least their parents, beating those centres’
doors down just like I am doing at the centres near me. I have genuinely called all of the
facilities near us and there just aren’t positions available.
Them: Well do you having any relatives or parents
that could look after your children? Maybe you should look into that.
Me: Oh gosh why didn’t I think of that?? Of
course!! I’ve got soooo many relatives and grandparents at a loose end, just
asking for something to do for 30 hours a week. This phone call is just a ruse
because, in my oodles of spare time, I just LOVE interacting with government
departments. I am just pretending to actually really need childcare so I could
call!!! Tricked you!! No
unfortunately I don’t have that option.
Them: Right well. You might need in-home care
then?
Me: Yes. That’s why I rang.
Them: In-home care is only available in Petersham.
Is that near you?
Me: No it’s not. Gosh that seems extraordinarily
lucky for the residents of Petersham; they get in home care while the rest of
Sydney doesn’t?
Them: In-home care is only available in very
limited circumstances.
Me: So I hear.
I rang Petersham. Turns out in-home care is not only available to the residents of
Petersham. It’s just the office that administers in-home care across New South
Wales is located in Petersham. Heaven
forbid these agencies would be across such minor details!
Before my will to work had wilted entirely, by a giant
stroke of luck (the universe perhaps rewarding me for time lost on hold to
Family Services???), I managed to secure Miss L two days in a family daycare
centre that has just opened quite near us. I can’t imagine doing two separate
drop-offs and pick-ups is going to be particularly easy or fun but, in
combination with a nanny one and a half days per week, it will make it possible
for me to work. Which is, even after all of this, what I want.
This palaver might have been more amusing if it hadn’t been
quite so stressful. If it weren’t for the fact it kept me awake at night for
nearly a month. Or the fact it occupied me for about 3 hours a day for nearly a
month (which is basically every spare moment I have in a 24-hour block). Or the
fact luck is the only reason I can work. Or the fact it is barely worth my
while, in real dollar terms, to work. If it weren’t for any of those things, I might
find the situation slightly more amusing. It might not be funny but the
situation is a joke. If only I could orchestrate another chance meeting with
Tony Abbott or Kevin Rudd to nut this out.
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