So I know I have a while to decide this, but I started talking childcare options with my DH. I have 2 boys 19 and 15 and I used a wonderful licensed at home provider then, but she lives very far out of the way from both home and work for both of us. So even though I trust her and like the familiarity I don't think I can go with her this time around.
I know from experience I want to find a place, either a center or a licensed at home provider, that their primary focus is caring for children and it is their profession. Every time I had to depend on friends and/or family they always felt comfortable letting me down, so I will not go there. I don't want favors, I want a professional.
My DH knows of a young mother, about 21, who has a 3 year old. She doesn't work outside of the home, her and her boyfriend are really hard up for money, he works at a fast food place, they don't have a vehicle. They live in the same apartment complex as his mother and she is really close to the young family and pays them to clean her apartment and fix things for her. I haven't met her yet. He wants to use her. I guess his mother has already discussed it with her. He likes that it will be more affordable, he likes that his mom is close, and he says he knows her and he likes her. But I am adamantly against that idea. Not because I dislike her. My doubts come from several areas, 1-How long will she be available to do it, likely until a better opportunity comes along. 2-Her child will be in preschool soon, so she might decide to get a regular job. 3-She does not have experience watching other people's children on a full time regular basis, it can be much different when you are caring for other people's children verses your own. 4- What would be her cancellation policy, will she be reliable. I know there will be days she wants to do things other than babysit. 5- She will be the only adult alone with my infant all day, and even though I know it is highly unlikely she will not be fair to my child, she will have no accountability in the moment, she could get overwhelmed. Plus, more that I can't even think of now.
He did not back down. He just said we have lots of time, I have a 12 week maternity leave. He also said i am worrying about things that might not happen, and I am assuming she is unreliable or untrustworthy. He also says I just keep bringing up more and more things to object about it, like I am just making up excuses, but I have legitimate doubts.
But what he doesn't understand yet, because he hasn't had to deal with the childcare thing the same way that I have, is that going with a professional place, you know everything up front, for the most part. You know if they are closed any days of the year usually a year in advance, you know their policy on sick kids, sick adult workers, many provide food so you don't have to bother with that. I will be the parent that has to work from home or take off work if the babysitter can't, so I feel like I have a more vested interest. I want reliability, stability, professionalism, and good structure for the child's day. I want our child to be able to go to the same place until school starts. I also want the environment to be such that any kind of abuse or neglect is almost impossible unless everyone there is guilty of it.
He thinks I am over-thinking it, but I think this is something that a lot of thought should be put into. It is the care of our child from 8 AM until 4 PM Monday through Friday.
And I feel like he is being pressured by his mom to give this girl a chance, because they are so hard up for money, and I can't give someone an opportunity like this just because they need it. I want someone who is proven to be qualified. But we will be continuing this conversation soon, I am sure.
Re: Disagreement on Childcare
Just food for thought.
With all that said, though, unless it were someone I personally knew and trusted, I probably wouldn't pick an individual just based on "oh, we know this girl that needs money." Because that doesn't scream "I'm passionate about children and childcare." So I can completely understand where you're coming from in this particular situation.
There are perks and drawbacks of any option you pick, unfortunately. So it's just a matter of both of you understanding where the other is coming from and coming to an educated agreement.