Editor's Corner
Why You Should Care
Its a Sunday night, and Im editing a story on Virginias child-care crisis when the sitter calls. Theres a bug
going around, and it has decided to pay her a visit.
My in-box is full, so taking a vacation day on Monday
is out of the question. My husband has a morning meeting he cant miss, but
hell try to get home early. My sons uncle, who can sometimes pinch-sit, is in
New York.
I call a friend and line up a good chunk of substitute time and cross my fingers that I
can repay the favor soon.
Any change in routine is a hassle, and parenting is difficult even when everything runs
smoothly. But I count myself lucky, as do other parents who have found some measure of
work-life balance. My sons sitter rarely has been sick. My job allows some
flexibility. And, most important, my employer is accommodating.
Can your workers say the same about you?
Marjolijn Bijlefeld, who wrote this months feature on day care while watching her
own two children, found that many Virginians are struggling, and theres much more
that businesses can do.
My system seems to work some days better than others. My former boss, who
resigned as executive editor to take over investor relations for Media General, made it
easy for me to be an editor and a mom. I was already telecommuting, and he said OK to flex
time. And Media General, which owns this magazine, has a dependent-care spending account
that helps make sitters more affordable.
I live within walking distance of Virginia Tech, which is why Ive been able to
find bright students willing and able to carve out time from class schedules to work. I
can only guess that trying to duplicate this setup in a market like Fairfax Countys
would be impossible.
Child care is a touchy subject. In the circles I travel, talking about child care can
be like talking about politics or religion.
A friend of mine attended a baby shower the other week and, trying to be social,
innocently asked one of the guests: "What do you do?"
The woman shot back a look: "I am a mother," she said.
"She made me feel guilty about the way Im raising my kids," my friend
said, "and I dont even have kids."
Kind of makes you want to shut up about the subject, right? Yet its better to
have information, to put it out in the open and to talk.
Bijlefeld did find promising news. There are workers whose employers have set up
on-site centers where employees can share meals with their children and enjoy an extra
measure of security about whos minding the kids. She also turned up a list of
smaller initiatives employers can try. Some dont cost a dime, and some can actually
save a company money.
She also turned up a group Id never heard of the Employer Child Care
Council. The Fairfax County business coalition is lobbying local government on behalf of
working parents, asking them to help ease the child-care crunch.
Its an encouraging move. If nothing else, employees of the 17 companies that make
up the council will know their employers care.
|