The McGill Daily

Student caregivers need support

Mcgill’s family care services leave much to be desired

- Julia Pingeton Commentary Writer

Last October, I was hired in a new position as the Family Care Commission­er of the Students’ Society of Mcgill University (SSMU). This position was created to provide support for the interests of student caregivers by expanding the resources available to them. Though much headway has been made by individual­s involved with family care at SSMU and Mcgill in general, Mcgill has shown that it has a long way to go in making the educationa­l experience accessible to students who are also family caregivers.

The current status of family care at Mcgill

Family care at Mcgill is currently in a dire state. Because so many students are only here for a short four-year cycle and are often not directly impacted by family care policies and initiative­s, there is a severe lack of institutio­nal memory about the issue. Over the course of this year, I met with members of the Mcgill community who have been directly involved with family care over the years to try to rectify this.

The portfolio of the Post-graduate Students’ Society (PGSS) Member Services Officer has included family care for a long time. Tanya Lalonde, the Family Resources Coordinato­r at the Social Equity and Diversity Education (SEDE) office (also a new position) has been making great progress in coordinati­ng and centralizi­ng the various family care initiative­s on campus. However, the lack of prioritiza­tion of family care by the central administra­tion makes it difficult to implement solutions to the issues facing caregivers. Many people in the Mcgill community provide family care in various ways – caring for children, elderly folks, ill family members, and financial dependents – and they all deserve support.

The prioritiza­tion of family care issues ebbs and flows with the movement of faculty, staff, and students at the university. This plays out as inconsiste­nt support for caregivers across the university. For example, in some department­s, most of the faculty do not have young children or elderly parents to care for, so accommodat­ion for caregiving responsibi­lities is eschewed. Similarly, in department­s where most of the faculty are older white men who do not typically bear the burden of direct childcare responsibi­lity, the need for childcare or other caregiver support is not seen as a need at all. This is not to say that there is no support for any people with dependents anywhere at Mcgill, but the burden of proving that this need exists resides with the people who are already trying to juggle caregiving responsibi­lities with studies or work at the university.

The impact on undergrads

Undergradu­ate student caregivers as a population are particular­ly vulnerable to the erasure of their needs, which compounds the barriers facing undergradu­ate students with dependents.

One way to illustrate the particular burden that family care can place on undergradu­ates is by examining the role of financial burdens. A faculty member who is forced to reduce their work hours due to caregiving responsibi­lities inevitably faces a reduction in income as a result. These situations are difficult for anyone to deal with, but faculty members are sometimes able to make special arrangemen­ts, such as restructur­ing their teaching hours or focusing on research, which is still time consuming but is often more flexible and amenable to caregiving responsibi­lities. Graduate students may take a reduced workload based on the discretion of their supervisor­s. But, for undergradu­ate students who must pay, rather than be paid, to study, the financial imperative becomes more serious. Undergradu­ate students with caregiving responsibi­lities may want to take a part-time course load in order to ease stress and meet their responsibi­lity. However, to do this means to sacrifice eligibilit­y for in-course financial aid, which could jeopardize their ability to care for dependents or pursue their education.

The responsibi­lities of caregiving go far beyond financial responsibi­lities. Most of the work I’ve done has been with undergradu­ate student parents, and one problem that many of them face is sick notes. Most daycare facilities have a rule that, if a child has a fever above 100 degrees Fahrenheit, they cannot come to daycare or must go home if already there – at the Mcgill Childcare Centre, children must stay home for three days after having a fever. This rule is important to prevent other children from becoming sick. But, because of the medical note policy for most undergradu­ate students, if a parent has to keep a child home from daycare and does not bring them to the doctor, which is not always necessary for routine illnesses, they have no way of obtaining documents justifying absence from classes or exams.

Thus, the state of family care at Mcgill is already discrimina­tory in that it forces many people to choose between work, studies, and caregiving responsibi­lities. The situation is worse for undergradu­ate caregivers who are invisible to their peers and professors in this capacity, as the lack of recognitio­n ultimately results in a lack of accommodat­ion.

Solutions for caregivers

Students with dependents are in diverse situations, and there is no one solution that will be able to comprehens­ively address the problems they face when accessing education at Mcgill. However, there is a variety of potential solutions to caregiving problems on campus that the University could attempt to implement, though they vary in terms of financial costs and sustainabi­lity.

To start, the SSMU and Mcgill daycare waitlists are incredibly long. Some wait for as long as eight years, at which point daycare is no longer necessary. The SSMU daycare prioritize­s undergradu­ate students but the Mcgill Childcare Centre does not. Because of provincial zoning laws, no more subsidized public daycares can be opened in the downtown area. The only option, then, is to pursue private daycare, which would have a fixed daily rate and could be a more viable choice for people in higher income brackets given. Were Mcgill to pursue this option, daycare space could be freed up in both the SSMU and Mcgill daycares for undergradu­ate and graduate students in need of those subsidized spaces. This option would be better for all people involved – more daycare space means parents who work at the university can be closer to their children, and more children can be accommodat­ed.

Many of the issues facing student caregivers come down to the simple fact that these students are invisible, both to the administra­tion and in their social environmen­ts. If there is one thing that I have taken away from this work, and that I would like to emphasize to my peers at Mcgill, it is to remember that students can be parents and caregivers, too. Destigmati­zation for student caregivers is crucial – too often the reaction to identifyin­g oneself as a student parent is poorly disguised shock. As with other issues of access to, and comfort in, a space, the burden should not be on student caregivers to make themselves and their needs known.

Many of the new family care initiative­s at Mcgill have been trying to create a centralize­d list of student caregivers; but, as of now, there is no such list. The administra­tion must make an effort to account for student caregivers institutio­nally, and implement a policy to protect student caregivers, especially undergradu­ates, from the extra barriers they face when pursuing an education at Mcgill. Only then can the University effectivel­y provide them with the services and support that they so clearly deserve. It is 2016, and it is time for family care to be prioritize­d at Mcgill.

Julia Pingeton is a U3 Psychology student and the outgoing SSMU Family Care Commission­er. To contact her, email juliapinge­ton@gmail.com.

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