College Campus Deemed "Too Dangerous" for Childcare

Annette Laing's picture

"Safety" has now become the latest excuse for a college trying to duck responsibility for childcare. Ogeechee Technical College president Dawn Cartee announced the closure of the campus childcare center in Statesboro, GA, arguing that colleges are dangerous places for small kids. In a March 28 letter to parents, according to an article in The Statesboro Herald, Cartee wrote:

"First and foremost, the safety of every child…is of great importance to us…You need only look at the news from around the country over the past weeks and months to know that a college campus is not always a safe place, and in my view, certainly not a safe place for a child care facility…Shootings, hostage situations, kidnappings, and other incidents have sadly become commonplace on college campuses… there are no guarantees."

Quite. There are certainly no guarantees for the employees and students of OTC who will now have to scramble for childcare, having been notified of the closure after the close of the registration period for fall. There are certainly no guarantees of decent childcare: A college spokesman pointed to the fifty-plus childcare programs in town as the answer to the problem, but neglected to mention that most of them are of poor quality, and that the good programs are oversubscribed.

When I gave birth to my son in Statesboro in 1999, OTC's child care center had an extremely long waiting list, and, although I put his name down as soon as I was allowed, we were never called (Georgia Southern University, my employer, did not offer infant childcare at that time). I was only able to find a spot in an acceptable childcare after another baby was diagnosed with a terminal illness, and left the program. I have heard little to suggest that the childcare situation is much improved since those days.

But, of course, there is another reason for the closure of OTC's program, according to Cartee's letter, quoted in the Herald, and that, of course, is the fact that money is spent on it:

"A second issue… is the strain on our budget which the center represents," Cartee wrote. "Since 2003, a substantial portion of our annual budget is utilized each year to subsidize the operation of the CEC – all with local tuition dollars, without the support of state funds…"

And then there's a third argument: God forbid that we as a society should support childcare:

"…while offering child care has been a noble undertaking, it is not our primary focus," Cartee wrote. "We cannot longer justify offering what is essentially a taxpayer supplemented child care program."

According to the OTC web site, this is the college's mission:

"Ogeechee Technical College is a public, two-year student-centered postsecondary educational institution that exists to facilitate economic growth and community development through quality educational programs and services for students, business, industry, and service organizations by offering technical education, adult literacy services, customized training, and workforce development opportunities. Ogeechee Technical College is committed to emphasizing the essential values of work ethics, community service, and lifelong learning. "

They might want to scratch the references to service.

Campus Child Care

My husband earned his BA and master's degree from Sacramento State University while I worked full time, earning as little as $12 an hour to support our family. The children's center at Sac State was one of our saving graces from 2003-2007 (that and affordable health care). They offered a safe place for our two children to grow and learn while my husband went to class. We even qualified for subsidized care some of that time, which was a blessing for a person trying to support 4 people on $12 an hour. For student parents, campus child care is so important. It is the most convenient option for many students, it provides a place for child development students to develop their skill--a win-win for everyone. Campus child care provides the opportunity for parents to earn degrees and improve their ability to get good jobs and support their families.

Hooray for Sac State's Children's Center! Campus child care ensures that parents can get an education!

Child care and college

I am a grad student at SUNY Albany, I support a husband and a 14 month old son on 1200 bucks a month, the child care center on campus charges 200 per week and my boy has been on the waiting list for a year. If you want to raise the standard of workers here in the US and prevent more jobs being moved overseas, colleges should provide free and decent child care for students and staff. I cannot afford the care here and it may prevent me from completing my program - my tuition fees are paid by the state so therefore tax payers are losing out as they fund me to teach undergrads but neglect child care. I will earn my PhD and then apply for jobs overseas. The least a college can do is protect its investments for the benefits of future students.

child care is important on college campuses

Anita's picture

Childcare provision on college campuses is definitely an issue to watch. Here is the beginning of a very interesting article on child care on campus, which says that 2500 out of 4000 institutions of higher learning in the US have child care.

"There has been a dramatic change since 1975 when 'virtually no campus child care) centers existed' (LCER, 1988, p.12). Today, the number of campus child care centers is increasing to encompass the needs of a growing and diverse student and faculty population. Many college campuses are currently struggling to recruit and retain qualified faculty, staff, and students, many of whom are seeking work or education on campuses that offer quality, affordable childcare.

The need for campus child care has increased in conjunction with the steady increase in numbers of women faculty and student parents on America's campuses. The percentage of full-time faculty who are female role to 36% in 2000-01, up from 22.5% in 1975 (AAUP, 2001), while the percentage of undergraduates who are single parents increased from 10% in 1995-1996 to 13.3% in 1999-2000. (U.S. Dept. of Education, NEDRC table library, 2003; Scott, 2001)."

http://www.ericdigests.org/2005-2/child-care.html

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