lindsmom
DIS Veteran
- Joined
- Oct 15, 2007
- Messages
- 1,802
You must be new here. I think sometimes hades has more compassion that this bunch of "Disney" fans... visit the community board sometimes.![]()
Haha!


Okay, ETA: I guess I can't hold back - I went through most of the comments. Personally, I do not have backup care. I have missed opportunities for extra work shifts because I do not have backup care. I consider "backup" to include someone that I feel comfortable / safe leaving my 14 month old for 5 - 6 hours. My choices are my mother who is becoming senile (she recently called me because she was lost in the next town over and couldn't find my house), my mother in law who has a blown rotator so she can't lift my son, my sister in law who has a full time job, my neighbor who is an alcoholic, or my other neighbor who has two large dogs that jump on anything that moves. I will not risk my child's safety with any of those situations (except my sister in law, and I'm not willing to risk her job for that).
IF I got the phone call that my husband or daughter were in the hospital, I would call my sister in law, and ask her to get out of work and she would. But that is an EMERGENCY situation. I'm not being dramatic, I just don't have that support system. He will be in preschool in another year and a half, and there would be the opportunity to ask for extra hours there. That will be backup care. Until then, I am his Primary Care and his Backup Care, and I'm okay with that.
Oh, and for those looking for the legal citation, it's jury act 28 usc1863(b)(5)(A) . It doesn't "guarantee" exemption, but there is a provision for "grounds for requesting excuse" for caretakers of children under ten years of age...whose safety would be jeopardized by their absence..."