Z.A.
I'm with Peg! Hurray for peace and sanity.
That said, there are a lot of options...but you'd have to explore them to see if they'd work for you and yours.
- Does your work or your husbands have daycare, daycare subsidy, or flex pay (money that comes out of your pre-tax income)? It's amazing to me how many do, and just don't advertise it.
- Do you qualify for any state assistance (like Head Start?)...would you if you quit your job or went down to part time? (There'd be a loss less need for childcare at that point, also). I say this...because for years I actually couldn't afford to work. It's really obvious when there's a deficit, but I have friends who are literally working for about 1.50 an hour after childcare & taxes are paid. Ugh. I guess for them the extra $240 a month is worth it. 10 hours a day 5 days a week (I add commuting time) for $240 is incomprehensible to me.
- Ever thought of going back to school? The UW subsidizes childcare/preschool for it's students. Depending on how much your husband makes a full package of financial aid (loans, grants, etc.) is about 12-20k. (I say 12, because about 8k goes towards tuition & books). Then add in the childcare subsidy. Which I don't know the current amount. We received about 600 a month. From someone who's done both...it's a lot easier to go to school full time with infants and toddlers then to be working full time. (You spend very little time in class...and then you do all your work when they're asleep...you also have fewer hours that you need to cover with childcare. Don't get me wrong, it's HARD, but the timing is soooo much different.).The UW paid for our son to go to a fantastic Montessori Preschool for 3.5 years. Well...mostly. We needed to cover an average of a $50 difference. And the school took the money straight from the UW, quarterly.
- Has your husband ever thought of going back to school? (see above)
- YMCA / Boys&Girls Clubs have reduced rates and tuition assistance.
- Many private preschools (like POSH as well as the average great preschools) have sliding scales and tuition assistance. I have friends who are sending their kids to a preschool that would cost them 15k if they were paying for it themselves. As it is, they pay about 2k, because they got grants & tuition assistance. Other friends on sliding scales send their kids to schools that would otherwise be impossible. You can mosly find out about these programs on their websites. Co-ops are another way to cut expenses. Some co-ops merely require the hours. If that's spending Saturdays landscaping, or evenings running a fundraiser, it's the same hours as for parents who are teaching in the classroom.
- Finding another mum or dad to split childcare with or to do a jobshare/childcareshare thing. I know a lot of people in healthcare who do this. The employers like it because they have 2 part time employees they don't have to give benefits to. (This works best when you have benefits through a spouse.) The people I know who do this love it because one parent watches all the kids on the 2.5 days a week that they're not working. That way neither is paying for childcare, because it's an even split, and you never have competing schedules...because you're literally splitting the job. It CAN work for 2 full time people, especially if it's opposite schedules, but it's obviously a lot harder.
- Going on an opposite schedule with your husband. This one sucks, unless you don't like your spouse. But, as it's also an option (and one I've done), it made the list.
- Doing a nannyshare. Nannyshare is frequent;y less expensive then a group in-home daycare. But you DO have to find a) a nanny who is willing, b) the RIGHT nanny, c) a family or 3 to share with.
I can't think of any others right at the moment... but these are all thing that either I've done, am currently doing, or that my friends have or are. You'd probably end up doing a combo of a few of these...since you're going to have children in very different age groups. AKA infant v potty trained toddler (price goes way down regardless as soon as the diapers go away, and there are more programs available for preschool, etc.).