Babysitting Co-ops Give Moms Precious Time
Here's the dilemma: You need to run several crucial errands, but
you dread taking your preschooler and toddler along. Here's
another one: You're working at home on a deadline, but your
preschooler wants to play and your toddler will not take a nap.
What about this: The sitter just called in sick, and you have a
doctor's appointment in an hour. Or even this: You and your
spouse have not gone out alone since you had the baby over a
year ago!
If you only had a reliable sitter for just an hour or two!
Smart moms -- and dads! -- have found the answer to the
babysitting dilemma in a babysitting co-op. A co-op provides a
sitter at just the crucial time they need to work at home, run
an errand or go out at night.
A babysitting co-op consists of a number of families in a
community who decide to share free babysitting among themselves.
The co-op can be used for errands, doctor's appointments or just
some quiet time in a coffee shop. Parents who work at home can
use their co-op for a few precious hours of total concentration
on work. It allows parents to get something done or enjoy some
free time without the hassle of finding a sitter and the expense
of paying for one. The parents feel more comfortable knowing
their children are watched by an adult they know and by someone
with whom the children feel comfortable as well.
"Moms all over have discovered that best friends make the best
babysitters," says Gary Myers, author of The Smart Mom's
Baby-sitting Co-op Handbook (ISBN 0-9678748-0-7). The book is
based on the University Place Babysitting Co-op near Seattle,
Washington, established in the early 1980s, and comes with a
companion kit that can be downloaded from
http://www.BabysittingCoop.com for free.
A co-op requires little work to start or manage. In fact, any
mom can invite a few friends over and start a co-op in one hour,
according to Myers. For families new to an area, placing a few
flyers in the community will attract those interested.
Additional promotion and work are usually not necessary. Myers
recommends keeping things simple in the co-op by establishing a
rotating secretary position to coordinate the sits.
"The secretary keeps track of points and calls the mom with the
biggest point deficit first to give her the chance to babysit
and earn back points," explains Myers.
This eliminates the need for chips that some co-ops use and
prevents those in need of a sitter from having to make several
frustrating calls. To keep co-op duties balanced, Myers
recommends allotting extra points to the person serving as
secretary and having the secretary position rotate monthly among
members. With a membership of about 10 families, each member
would have to serve as secretary only about one month a year.
"Our co-op provides affordable, reliable and available
babysitters, as well as a way to connect with others in the
community," says Cheri Benz of Maroa, Ill., who started her
co-op in conjunction with her playgroup. "My daughter enjoys
playing with the other kids whenever I do a sit, which actually
relieves me from having to be her exclusive playmate and
entertainment."
Best of all, work-at-home parents agree that a co-op allows them
to plan their day better. Knowing they will have reliable
sitters at a certain time lets them schedule those important
calls when the house will be quiet or lets them focus on a
crucial project without interruption.
However, even single parents or those who work traditional
weekday hours can benefit from participating in babysitting
co-ops. As a matter of fact, Babysitter Exchange at
http://www.babysitterexchange.com was founded by parents such as
these as an online service for parents who already know each
other to create groups that schedule and trade babysitting time.
Co-op groups come from the neighborhood, children's preschool,
local church, soccer team or any other established community
group.
As with most co-ops, Babysitter Exchange uses a credit system.
Unlike other co-ops, it eleminates the need for a secretary
because it manages all the administration of the groups, such as
member profiles, credit accounting, and email communications,
via the Internet. For parents who do not have time to serve as
secretary or to attend meetings, an online resource for
babysitting has been very helpful, almost as helpful as the
co-op itself.
"As a parent, whether working outside the home or not, you don't
get a 'break.' There isn't any 'off time' at all," says Danielle
Lee, a working mother in Mission Viejo, California. "Having a
support system is somewhat therapeutic for all."
A babysitting co-op provides that support system crucial to any
parent. Don't wait until the next time you need a sitter, try
solving your babysitting dilemma with a babysitting co-op today!