The Mudcat Café TM
Thread #123900   Message #2732452
Posted By: Rasener
27-Sep-09 - 12:21 PM
Thread Name: BS: Childcare Help could be illegal UK
Subject: BS: Childcare Help could be illegal UK
I have just seen this on the BBC News, which if to be believed IMHO just beggars belief.

Childcare help 'could be illegal'

Parents can find it difficult to get childcare
Parents in England who regularly look after friends' children and receive a "reward" for doing so must register as childminders, regulator Ofsted says.

It said most parents would be exempted but those who babysit for more than two hours at a time, or more than 14 days per year, should be registered.

The "reward" could be money or free baby-sitting in return, it said.

It comes after Ofsted told two police women to end an arrangement to care for each other's children.

According to the Mail on Sunday, Ofsted told two detective constables, Leanne Shepherd, from Milton Keynes, and Lucy Jarrett, from Buckingham, to end their arrangement.

Ms Shepherd told the newspaper: "When the Ofsted inspector turned up, the first thing she said was: 'I have had a report that you're running an illegal childminding business'.

"I straightaway thought she must be mistaken, so invited her into my home to explain we were police officers and best friends helping each other out.

"But she told me I was breaking the law and must end the arrangement with Lucy immediately. I was stunned, completely devastated... I couldn't see how I could continue working."

Petition started

According to the article, the Thames Valley officer is believed to have been reported by a neighbour.

An Ofsted spokesman said it applies regulations found in the 2006 Childcare Act, but was currently discussing the interpretation of the word "reward" with the department for Children, Schools and Families (DCSF).

"Reward is not just a case of money changing hands. The supply of services or goods and in some circumstances reciprocal arrangements can also constitute reward," he said.

"Generally" mothers who look after each other's children are not providing childminding for which registration is required because the care is for less than two hours or takes place on less than 14 days in a year, he said.

Close relatives of the child such as grandparents, siblings, aunts or uncles are exempt from the rules, he added.

A petition to scrap the rules governing reciprocal child care on the Number 10 website has gathered more than 2,000 signatures.

Anyone required to register to become a childminder would also have to undergo a criminal records check.

http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/uk/8277378.stm