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Disaster Planning & Corporate Child Care:
What CEOs Need to Do 

(Article originally published by WFC Resources, March 2006, as a Guest Column written by Kathleen Beauchesne, who directs the faculty and staff assistance program as well as the Work-life programs for Johns Hopkins)

Despite the days of public fear and near-panic that followed September 11 and the anthrax and smallpox threats, the needs of young children, their families, and their caregivers did not become a national priority. Since then, we have witnessed the plight of children in other disasters, including the devastation in coastal Asia and Africa that resulted from the tsunami in December 2004 and more recently the destruction in New Orleans and the Gulf Coast caused by Hurricanes Katrina and Rita. All of these disasters tore children from their parents and families, and left many young children lost, unidentified, and orphaned.

In the United States almost 12 million children younger than five years old (approximately 6 out of 10) spend part of their waking hours in the care of people other than their parents. These caregivers include relatives, family daycare providers operating out of their homes, workers in childcare centers, staff members of Head Start and other organizations, and teachers in state-financed pre-kindergartens. Most businesses can only estimate how many of their employees’ children are in some type of childcare, but companies with on-site or near-site child care centers know exactly how many very young children are in their care. CEOs and other corporate leaders have a great responsibility for the safety of their employees’ children cared for company child care centers. Today, there are a number of situations that highlight the need for thoughtful deliberations about corporate childcare centers including the alarming avian influenza, weather conditions, and violence and crime.

Viruses, Influenza and Other Contagious Illnesses. The SARS outbreak in Toronto received a great deal of attention, and the widespread trauma caused by the quarantine and the deaths of health care workers was overwhelmingly stressful for those working in these units. With the avian flu outbreaks this year, it is inevitable that similar events will happen in the future and corporate childcare centers will be caring for children whose parents are exposed to illnesses, and are not permitted access to anyone, including their children. Corporations must develop plans to address these situations and shelter children in their care safely.

Weather and Other Hazardous Conditions. One can only imagine the emotional and physical effort it required to protect, calm, comfort, organize, and guide or carry children (some too young to walk or follow directions) to safety amid the danger, debris, fear, and confusion of September 11th or Hurricane Katrina. Evacuating very young children in frightening and hazardous weather conditions, including very hot or very cold weather, through debris, broken glass, downed power lines, throughout hurricanes and floods requires careful and thoughtful planning. Several key issues to consider regarding evacuations include how the children will be identified and transported, and who will care for them.

Violence and Crime. Our nation’s childcare centers are remarkably unprotected from violence and crime. Childcare center directors and providers are often the only security on-site, and frequently the so-called “security” at the front door of a childcare center consists of a single doorbell. Childcare center directors and staff serve single-handedly as the front line of defense for years managing domestic disputes, child abductions, child abuse, community violence and other traumatic situations.

With these critical events in mind, it is essential that companies with corporate child care centers seriously consider the following recommendations because the safety of their employees’ children is at stake. Employees will be needed at work, and those with children cannot work without child care. No corporation can afford to ignore the need for child care disaster planning at every level of the organization.

1. Develop goals and objectives for childcare disaster planning. CEOs should ensure that corporate risk managers and disaster planners, as part of the disaster planning process, discuss issues and make recommendations regarding the goals and objectives of the corporate disaster plan. Disaster planning for children in employer-sponsored daycare centers should be phase-specific because the responses to a disaster change with time. That is, the overall disaster plan should include specific plans for managing the children who are enrolled in childcare when a disaster occurs, as well as specific plans for caring for the children of critical personnel who might be needed elsewhere in the response, either during or after the disaster.

2. Formally charge risk managers and childcare vendors to develop childcare disaster plans. Disaster plans for corporate daycare centers are essential, and until such plans are in place and formally integrated with the organization’s overall disaster plan, the children cared for day in and day out are at risk, not only in the event of a major disaster, but also in other types of crises. CEOs should support formation of a committee that is assigned responsibility for developing a disaster plan that addresses caring for children in the corporate childcare centers during a disaster.

3. Plan for children of all ages at work. Following a disaster, children will not be at their usual locations (e.g., school). Childcare arrangements break down as schools close and as daycare systems are unable to operate. Parents cannot leave their young children at home and, therefore, will bring them to work. Corporations should develop plans and programs for caring for these children. It is also essential to ensure that corporate risk management plans and liability and insurance coverage extend to these situations.

4. Use a flexible model for disaster response. A flexible and adaptable childcare model is currently available, used by the Church of the Brethren to operate childcare facilities for the Red Cross and FEMA in shelters during a disaster. Trained Church of the Brethren teams respond to a call for volunteers, and arrive at a shelter with a “Kit of Comfort,” which contains everything they need to set up a daycare center at a disaster site, to register the children, to care for the children, and to organize play areas, while their parents tend to family needs such as applications for assistance, insurance assessments, and other day-to-day activities.
(http://disasternews.net/disasters/5-22-00_alert2.shtml; http://www.brethren.org/genbd/ersm/dcc.htm).

5. Pre-incident training, table top exercises and planning is critical. Pre-incident preparation, table top exercises and planning should involve all day care staff to ensure that center procedures are practiced and gaps in plans addressed. The roles and responsibilities of day care staff should be crystal clear, and plans should be made to ensure that the families and children of day care center staff are also cared for and safe. Childcare centers should be included in all corporate disaster drills and simulations.

6. Provide tools for coping. Employee assistance programs and work/life programs should be involved and work with daycare center personnel to provide services to help those affected by the disaster at every stage from pre-incident planning to post-disaster care. They can also assist families with pre-incident preparation.

7. Develop a corporate media plan for employee parents and their children. One major element of a disaster plan is to ensure that childcare center staffs receive important information as soon as possible. Early education and awareness training for employees can provide information and encourage discussions about how the childcare center will protect and care for their children during a disaster. In addition, specific information should be compiled about how to cope in a disaster; such information not only helps mitigate fear (among the caregivers, parents, and children), but also helps caregivers manage their own reactions.

8. Integrate daycare disaster plans with corporate disaster plans, incident command structures, and risk management committees. Generally, daycare disaster plans, if they exist, are not integrated into the overall corporate disaster plans, incident command structures, and the risk management committees that operate them.

9. Integrate planning with the corporate security force response and with transportation resources. Issues related to transporting daycare staff to work are relatively straightforward, but the capacity to transport many infants and small children is a different matter. It is important to ensure that resources are sufficient to accomplish this task.

10. Integrate and ensure an effective response from the employee assistance, work/life, human resources, and other mental health resources. The childcare disaster plan should be integrated with the corporate-wide human resources disaster plan to ensure that mental consultations and responses are available to the childcare center staff and to employee parents. Mental health personnel who are trained in children’s mental health can not only help daycare providers respond to children’s questions about an event but also help them provide support to the parents.

11. Ensure funding for appropriate resources for centers for disaster child care. CEOs should ensure that funding for disaster resources for corporate childcare centers is built into budgets each and every year.

12. Coordinate planning with local community, city, and state governments. We know that in an emergency government will respond first to the areas where they perceive the most need. Plans for daycare centers should be coordinated with the city disaster plan and with the state daycare administration so that both are aware of the steps an organization will take to care for the children in its daycare centers during a disaster.

In summary, models for childcare disaster plans already exist that can be adapted to meet specific needs, and the National Association for the Education of Young Children (NAEYC) now has accreditation standards that pertain to disaster preparation and planning, and companies like Bright Horizons Family Solutions have published templates. These accreditation standards and templates are excellent starting points for reviewing or developing a corporate childcare disaster plan.

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Dr. Kathleen Beauchesne directs the faculty and staff assistance program as well as the Work-life programs for Johns Hopkins. She is currently a member of the Board of Directors for the Maryland Committee for Children, member of the EAPA WORKlife Task Force, and a member of the EAPA Trauma Response Task Force, and the national Robert Woods Johnson Last Acts Workplace Task Force. She is a founding member of the College and University Work and Family Association, the Work and Family Network of Maryland, the founding chair of the national Work and Family Committee of the Employee Assistance Professional Association (EAPA), and a past member of the Board of Directors for the Alliance of WorkLife Professionals.