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Anxious Kansas Parents Keep Kids Home From Day Care Amid Coronavirus Outbreak

An empty playground outside of Plymouth Preschool in Wichita.
Stephan Bisaha
/
Kansas News Service

WICHITA, Kansas — Day cares, at a premium in Kansas in non-pandemic times, are essential businesses that can stay open while the state is under a stay-at-home order. Overall, they’re seeing a drop in the number of kids who show up, but want to be there for health care workers.

“The nurses. The doctors. Everybody on the frontlines,” Phillipsburg Child Care Center program director Brooke Feik said. “They need somewhere to take their kiddos.”

Meanwhile, some parents who are at home due to social distancing or climbing unemployment are keeping their kids with them while still paying to keep their day care spots for when the virus lifts. And about 7% of Kansas day cares decided it was too risky to stay open, especially with a combination of hygiene-oblivious toddlers and a shortage of cleaning supplies.

Staying home

The biggest competition to child care facilities during the pandemic: friends, family and neighbors. With plenty of Kansans stuck home, they have the free time to watch each other’s kids.

“If you know that your neighbor is also home cause she's a school teacher, you might approach her and say ‘Hey, can you watch your children Monday, Wednesday, Friday? I'll watch your children on Tuesday, Thursday,’" said Leadell Ediger, executive director of Child Care Aware of Kansas, which runs the state’s child care referral network.

According to a last year’s child care state report, 77% of Kansas counties had fewer than one child care spot per 10 toddlers, and there were 10% fewer child care programs in the state than two years prior.

But while attendance at child care has dropped, enrollment has not. Day care providers say many parents continue to write the tuition checks, figuring it’s better to pay for unused child care than give up one of the state’s limited number of spots.

“If we had several people coming in looking for care next week and you didn’t have that spot held for your child, we wouldn’t necessarily have a spot for them,” said Jaime Noone, a teacher at Logan ABC Community Day Care Center.

Cleanliness at centers

The practical advice for preventing the spread of the coronavirus is easy — wash your hands, stay six feet away from other people, don’t touch your face. But try giving it to a three-year-old.

Kansas provides some social distancing guidelines for child care centers, like no more than 10 kids in a group, not mixing the group and keeping employees with the same group.

Providers say that’s not too different from what they already have to do to keep their licenses, but they also say keeping kids six feet apart is unrealistic when they’re just learning what personal space means.

“We are doing everything we can to space children, but the reality of children is that’s not a feasible task,” said Emily Barnes, who operates Barnes Childcare in Olathe.

Instead, day care providers take kids’ temperatures before they come inside. The parents stay outside. One center has the fingerprint scanner that parents have to use when dropping off their kids each day, and it’s cleaned constantly.

There’s also a lot of hand-washing — a lot. At one center, kids have to each time they touch their face.

But like a lot of places right now, it’s hard to find cleaning supplies, thermometers and disposable thermometer covers. About 7% of child care providers in the state closed their doors since mid-March, mostly to stop the spread of the virus, according to Child Care Aware of Kansas.

Still working

The parents who still need day care services are often those who can’t stay at home.

Kerri Burr usually drops her 3-year-old daughter off at a Wichita day care. Burr has worked at home for a while, writing grants for a nonprofit, but her husband still goes in for his job at a car dealership.

All four of their kids are now at home because schools are closed, and she works at night so her husband can be on parenting duty.

She said it would have been easier to keep sending her daughter to day care, but she didn’t want to be a vector.

“It’s hard for me to have everyone home but I don’t have to wonder if we’re spreading something around to somebody whose body can’t handle it or fight it off,” Burr said. Stephan Bisaha reports on education and young adult life for KMUW and the Kansas News Service. You can follow him on Twitter @stevebisaha.

The Kansas News Service is a collaboration of KCUR, Kansas Public Radio, KMUW and High Plains Public Radio focused on health, the social determinants of health and their connection to public policy. Kansas News Service stories and photos may be republished by news media at no cost with proper attribution and a link to ksnewsservice.org.

Copyright 2020 KMUW | NPR for Wichita. To see more, visit .

Stephan Bisaha is a former NPR Kroc Fellow. Along with producing Weekend Edition, Stephan has reported on national stories for Morning Edition and All Things Considered, as well as other NPR programs. He provided data analysis for an investigation into the Department of Veteran Affairs and reported on topics ranging from Emojis to mattresses.
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