Ritchie Bros. Auctioneers, Burnaby. Childcare from the ground up
When Ritchie Bros. planned its move from Richmond, B.C. to Burnaby, it sent out extensive surveys asking staff what they wanted at the new company headquarters. One overwhelming request: on-site childcare. The company ultimately chose to build and operate the childcare centre itself, rather than outsource the operation as many companies do.
The result is a parent’s (not to mention a child’s) dream: 5,500 square feet of teeny child-sized tables, chairs, cubbies, washroom stalls, developmental toys, arts and crafts supplies, books and more – almost all made with natural materials, with very little plastic in sight. Outdoors, there is a play area with slides, ride-on toys and enormous sandbox.
The centre is open 7:30 a.m. to 5:30 p.m. Three rooms serve children from infancy to elementary-school age. It is licensed to serve up to 49 children. The centre also operates as a day camp during the summer and on school holidays). Employees pay a subsidized rate.
When Ritchie’s new facility held its open house last year, more than one employee walking through the childcare centre was overheard telling their partner, “Okay, we can have that baby now.”
Stressed out: More and more children being treated for emotional issues
Stress, anxiety, panic disorders, depression, obsessive
compulsion and sleep deprivation. Physical and emotional issues
usually affecting some adults are now the signs of today's troubled
kids.Elementary-age children are being treated for depression, and high
school guidance counselors say mental health issues are on the
rise.Franciscan Skemp Behavioral Health clinical therapist Christine
Hughes is among the local experts who see an increase in
elementary, middle and high school students battling emotional
disorders. Many are pushing themselves too hard and are driven to
achieve."I figure kids are more stressed out. … They have homework from
kindergarten," she said. "I think it has something to do with the
increased demands on kids academically that they're not just all
skipping on a playground and having a great day."Family issues can be the trigger; so can testing or relationships
or varied expectations, Hughes said.Hughes and others say kids are sleep-deprived, and despite often
being high achievers, they exhibit low self-esteem and resort to
self-mutilation that includes cutting and eating disorders."We need to stop ourselves and the notion that we are … tied to
technology and need to communicate and have a need for things and
perfectionism and certain standards," said Randy Kahn, a Family
& Children's Center therapist who works in the agency's Viroqua
office."We really bought into this weird picture, and yet something so
obviously is out of whack in so many serious, troubling ways, and
we don't do anything about it," Kahn said.
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