Regina Leader-Post

Au pairs as caregivers a daycare option and more

Families seeking flexible child-care turn to hiring young travellers

- CASSANDRA SZKLARSKI

TORONTO Calgary mom Paige Shaw found herself in a bind when her nanny decided to return to Toronto last year.

Her two boys, aged three and five, needed full-time care, a chauffeur to various activities and an energetic playmate. So she turned to the Internet to find their next caregiver and joined a growing number of Canadians seeking new ways to manage what can be frustratin­gly hard-to-find child care — by hiring an au pair.

The 38-year-old says she had never heard of the concept before last year, but after finding a 19-year-old from Perth, Australia, she says it is “hands down” the best arrangemen­t for her family.

“She really has become part of the family,” says Shaw, noting that her youngest has developed a taste for Vegemite while both boys — now four and six — have adopted some uniquely Australian phrases, complete with a Down Under accent.

“I don’t think we’ve ever had a better experience.”

The phenomenon of hiring a young traveller on a holiday working visa instead of a traditiona­l livein nanny is definitely on the rise, says Manuela Gruber Hersch of the Vancouver-based Internatio­nal Nannies and Homecare.

“We started about four years ago with a few, and then basically the placements after that doubled,” says Gruber Hersch, also president of the Associatio­n of Caregiver and Nanny Agencies Canada. “And then it grew again last year and it will grow again next year as well.”

She pegs the rise to changes two years ago to the federal government’s foreign caregiver program that made it “risky, very expensive and cumbersome” to secure a fulltime nanny from overseas.

One of the reasons au pairs are lesser known in Canada is that many are hired under the table, says Gruber Hersch. Cost is a big issue, since parents must adhere to minimum wage rules and make deductions for Employment Insurance, Canada Pension Plan and income tax.

In the end, the cost can be comparable to a traditiona­l daycare or nanny, but there are key difference­s.

While a nanny generally has specialize­d training and experience working with children, au pairs are typically young women with only a casual babysittin­g background, which might not be suitable for younger kids.

Au pairs primarily help look after children, but they can also be relied on to ferry them to appointmen­ts and help parents with light household chores — added duties that can vary depending on the nanny.

A big plus for Shaw was that her au pair, Kim Spence, stayed on the clock when her kids were home sick or had a day off from school, unlike most daycares and nannies.

In exchange, Shaw provided room and board — the cost of which was deducted from Spence’s hourly wage — and a surrogate family that welcomed Spence at the dinner table and on vacations.

The appeal for Spence, now 20, was the chance to travel halfway around the world and explore a country she’d heard great things about.

“My job is amazing. I love it. The kids are so independen­t as well,” explains Spence, noting the gig has permitted her to indulge in regular weekend hiking trips, while vacation days allowed longer jaunts to Toronto, California, British Columbia and Alaska.

She estimates she’ll return to Australia with $3,000 in savings, despite her frequent travels.

Shaw says the agency she worked with helped devise a contract and whittled down a list of candidates based on personalit­y matches. Personalit­y and communicat­ion were key, since the line between what’s considered on-the-clock and off can blur, she says.

 ?? ARRY MACDOUGAL/THE CANADIAN PRESS ?? Paige Shaw, top left, with her family Chase, Finn, and Dana Shaw, found full-time child care in Australian au pair Kimberley Spence who is also a chauffeur and a playmate.
ARRY MACDOUGAL/THE CANADIAN PRESS Paige Shaw, top left, with her family Chase, Finn, and Dana Shaw, found full-time child care in Australian au pair Kimberley Spence who is also a chauffeur and a playmate.

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