Australia: PRODUCTIVITY COMMISSION DIVIDES CHILD CARE INDUSTRY

But What is Best for Working Parents?

The Productivity Commission’s draft report published in July looked at the issues facing many parents whose lives and working hours don’t conform to standard child care hours or “approved” child care services. It also discussed how to address the chronic shortfall of child care places in many areas and how to improve women’s workforce participation.

Two of the recommendations made were that overseas Au Pairs should be allowed to stay with one family for the full 12 month working holiday visa (opposed to the current six month maximum period with any one family) and that there should be an extension of child-based government assistance to enable greater access to home-based care services. This is in order to improve accessibility for the growing number of families with parents who work irregular or non-standard hours.

The report also argued that the government should allow approved nannies to become an eligible service, for which families can receive assistance, conditional on those nannies meeting the same National Quality Standards, care ratios and qualifications that currently apply to family day care services.

The above recommendations have been put forward to help address the huge unmet demand for child care in Australia, particularly for the under twos, together with the needs for those families with more than one pre-school aged child, and those with special circumstances, who are working shifts or unsociable hours or who have children with special needs.

In Australia, there are around 3.8 million children under 13 years old, living in over 2 million families. Around half of these children use some form of non-parental care in either the formal or informal sectors or both. And demand is growing as the population and workforce increases.

The Productivity Commission estimates that over 100,000 additional full-time places will be needed by 2026. And increasing long day care places and assistance for Family Day Care Services will still not meet these numbers or the needs of all parents.

Industry bodies and child care businesses of course all have their own opinions to the plausibility, viability or suitability of these recommendations and there will inevitably be some debate over the correct division of child care funding.

The Productivity Commission is suggesting that the various child care benefits, rebates and special assistance be streamlined into one means tested subsidy to make it fair and easy to navigate for parents.

Au Pairs can be a great option for families, particularly if parents buddy up and share an au pair. Only one of you needs to have the extra bedroom, but all can chip in for the cost of bed, board and pocket money. They can bring a different cultural experience for children and often a new language to learn.

And don’t be fooled into thinking that Au Pairs are inexperienced or unqualified. Many women across the world have been au pairs for years. They often have child care qualifications in their own countries and are likely to be more experienced in child care than many child care workers in formal day care centres! The only downside is that they can only stay for up to a year.

Nannies have been around for just as long, if not longer, than day care centres and child-minders. They are often seen as elitist, but the fact is that if you have more than one pre-school child they are far more viable, for average income families, not just high income earners. They often become a very valued member of the family and a good nanny is worth his or her weight in gold.

Vice-president of the Australian Nannies Association (ANA), Annemarie Sansom said that families employing a professional nanny should receive subsidies equivalent to those applied to other forms of childcare.

“When families have two or three children in childcare, the cost is comparable to that of employing a nanny. What makes employing a nanny more expensive at the moment is the lack of any subsidy,” she said.

In-home care is essentially a part time or full time nanny service, but one that is approved and subsidised by the Federal Government, due to special circumstances. It enables families with unusual work, location or care requirements to access approved child care in their own home, and is currently only available to those families that are unable to access standard child care services and/or families in unusual circumstances.

In-Home Care is particularly appropriate for families where parents work night shifts or unsociable hours, as well as those who are in remote locations and don’t have access to child care centres etc.

Recent Government initiatives and Productivity Commission recommendations have included the expansion of access and eligibility to in-home care and funding has been increased to enable more families to access the service.

To see how in-home care varies from the other forms of child care currently available to parents have a look at our child care comparison table.

There is no wrong or right form of child care. No one-size-fits-all. All families and their needs are different.

Written by Sophie Cross for CareforKids.com.au: http://www.careforkids.com.au/newsletter/2014/september/17/pc.html

Stuck for childcare and no family nearby?

A Granny Au Pair may be just what you need!

As we all know, quality child care is in short supply and if you’re in the position where you’d love a nanny, but don’t have the funds, or you could do with some grandparent help, but have none nearby, then the latest child care inspiration – The Granny Au Pair – could be just the thing.

You may have previously discounted the idea of an au pair due to the image of a young, homesick studenty sort with possibly little experience in child care. Or you might have been put off by another image: the super-efficient, six-foot, gorgeous blond from Scandinavia. But perhaps it’s time to reconsider…

Would the idea of a more mature age woman, from your mother’s generation appeal? A woman who has reached retirement with a desire to travel and see more of the world, but not necessarily with the funds to be able to do so on her own and looking for a nice family to live with and help out for a summer or a set period of time?

Well it’s entirely possible. With an ageing population and a more sprightly generation of pensioners who want to see more of the world when they finally retire, more mature ladies (and some gentlemen), aka “granny au pairs”, from all over the world have increasingly been using their experience of raising children and running a household to travel around the world and expand their horizons while staying with families who need a helping hand with the kids and chores.

There are a number of agencies specialising in granny au pairs, but one of the first was the eponymous Granny Au Pair, based in Germany and the brainchild of German woman, Michaela Hansen, who created an au pair agency purely for the over 50s.

Hansen missed the opportunity to be an au pair and travel when she became a mum at 20 and launched the initiative to send young-at-heart grandmas from Germany all over the world after watching a TV programme about young au pairs.

“I thought: Why isn’t there something similar for older women?” A few months later she set up Granny Au Pair – an online portal that places women aged over 50 abroad as ‘au pair grannies’.

Granny au pairs however can bring with them a wealth of experience in child care, housekeeping, cooking and managing a household and can bring with them an added dimension to a family, particularly when grandparents aren’t living nearby.

Hansen believes they can be much more beneficial to families than younger au pairs: “Young people often still lack prudence and sensitivity. Older au pairs draw on a wealth of life experience and take the daily challenges in their stride. They are active and curious and eager to find out about other cultures and customs and they want to improve their language skills”.

Like most au pairs, they take care of children in exchange for room and board. There is usually no pay, though the family and au pair are free to come to an arrangement, and a membership fee is paid to Granny Au Pair.

From India to Australia, Dublin to New York, granny au pairs have been putting smiles on children’s faces over the past three years with Granny Au Pair.

Click here to search for au pair agencies in your area.

With regards to “hosting” a granny au pair in terms of visa compliance, it is a very grey area (geddit!). Most grannies would be on a visitor visa and may not therefore be working for or supplying services to an organisation or other person based in Australia’, according to Immigration website. However on a Tourist or Visitor visa, you can volunteer…

“Tourist and Visitor visa holders may be able to work as a volunteer where the work is genuinely voluntary and no remuneration is received in return for the activities”, but if the family pays pocket money, expects at least 25 hours per week or even if they offer to pay for the au pair’s flight as part of their arrangement, this could be deemed as remuneration.

As with all foreign travellers and people hoping to work in Australia, would-be granny au pairs or host families should check compliance with visa status with the Department of Immigration or an au pair agency. For additional help go to www.volunteering.com.au or www.volunteering.com.au.

When researching this story the general comment from the team here at CareforKids.com.au (as most of us are mums) is that we personally couldn’t imagine anything worse than going to do chores for someone else’s family and kids when we are in our dotage, but who knows… the travel bug may get us and we’ll be off to live-in some swanky mansion in LA to look after Brad & Angelina’s grandchildren! Life could be worse.

Published for CareforKids.com.au http://www.careforkids.com.au/newsletter/2014/april/23/