REALLY???
So when your boss tells you you have to start working less hours, lose your benefits and the pay for those lost hours, you are just going to be OK with that? I would love to see that!
Or when you go out of town and no one is there to use any electricity or other utilities, or even just decide to have a TV and Internet free week...are you calling those companies and saying you refuse to pay for the services that time frame, but things are back to normal after that? No, of course you are not, cuz that would be stupid. But for whatever reason in so many peoples mind, its OK to think this way regarding the person who cares for your precious child.
The person who hopefully has CPR training, First Aid, Shaken Baby and SIDS training, carries extra insurance to cover accidents or injury during the daycare hours. The person who buys more groceries than anyone you know and who goes thru toilet paper and baby wipes faster than you can comprehend. The person who purchases every thing needed for curricula to teach things to your child in a manner of which parents these days expect. To have a safe and clean home. The person who likely works a MINIMUM of 60 hours a week to maintain and plan all of this. Plus attends classes, college or trainings to maintain their credentials for it all.And this person still has bills of their own they need to budget for. If parents just willy-nilly took days off when they took a day off work, work had no tasks for them that day, a relative came to town, etc. Crud..we providers would never be able to pay our OWN bills.
Yes, we providers run a business. We charge based on enrollment and expect to get paid for it. In my home daycare (14 years strong), if you do not pay, you do not come back. We contract for specific schedules so we can attempt to fill around them. Personally I only do full time to avoid this..and have one PT child to have a few light days and flexibility to take a drop in here and there for my other daycare pals if they are on vacation or sick.
Like others said, find a drop in center (where they typically have no continuity of care and cost more per day/hour, for starters), or ask your current provider to re-negotiate the contract you have. Likely she will still want specific days listed, however (M, W, F, etc..and a fee for any switching, if she even can...etc).
I think you are lucky she cuts you any break (half rates or whatever?) I do none of that.
Hope it all works out for all of you.