Saturday, February 23, 2008
The Nanny Economy
Duncan Mavin
It's a bleak January morning in a Don Mills cafe when Elena Bautista explains  why she left her husband and young daughters in the Philippines five years ago  to look after someone else's children in Canada.
"I came here for the future of my kids," says Bautista. "It's for a greener  pasture."
Bautista is one of tens of thousands of Filipina nannies who have come to  Canada in search of a decent salary and a better life. Like many of the nannies,  she hopes her family will one day be able to follow her to Canada. But there's a  deep personal cost to her plans.
"It's hard," says Bautista, a small, quiet 41-year-old who speaks English  well, albeit with a halting Filipino accent. As she talks about her family she  twists her fork slowly in a plateful of the cafe's pancit noodles that are "OK,"  but not as tasty as the ones she makes at home.
She has been back to the Philippines only twice since first arriving in  Toronto and buys phone cards so she can call her family at least once a  week.
"Of course I want to see my girls so much, and they want me to be with them,  too."
Her employers, Paul and Rebecca Robertson, live among Toronto's elite in  Rosedale. The Robertsons (names have been changed at the family's request) both  work demanding jobs, while Bautista takes care of their two children -- she  calls them "my children" -- Ellie, 2, and her brother Jacob, 4.
"I was there in the hospital when
Jacob was born," she says. "Jacob really loves cuddling."
Bautista says the Robertsons are respectful of her time and the sacrifice she  makes in order to look after their kids. Paul says Elena is one of the family --  besides, it makes sense to take care of the person you are trusting with your  children.
The Robertsons even paid for Bautista's two visits home -- a time full of  mixed emotions for all involved, says Bautista.
When she leaves Ellie and Jacob in Toronto they are very upset. And when the  time comes to say goodbye again to her daughters, Chrystal, 12, and Cherry-May,  10, they are devastated, too. "Your kids are crying and so are you. You have to  turn your back and plug your ears."
The most trying times are birthdays -- Chrystal's was last month -- and  Christmas, when she buys an extra phone card to make a longer call home. Later  this year, it will be Chrystal's sixth-grade graduation prom and Bautista has  already broken the news that she won't be there to help her daughter choose a  dress for the big event.
But with her Canadian income, Bautista has sent money home that has paid for  the girls to go to private school -- this means class sizes of fewer than 30  compared to as many as 80 in state schools -- and pays for a standard of living  that would otherwise be out of reach for her family.
"To me, life is more happy in the Philippines," says Bautista. "But  financially �? it's not enough. It's not enough."
Bautista's husband, Stephen, and their two girls live more than 13,000  kilometres from Toronto. Their home is in the village of La Trinidad, on the  outskirts of Baguio, a mountain city of congested streets that's a seven hour  drive from Manila.
Their second-storey apartment lies among dozens of other rough concrete and  tin constructions across a bridge of two wooden planks and down a pot-holed  road. Hot and cold running water is a luxury here, even for middle-class  families.
Stephen and Elena were childhood neighbours -- they married in 1994 but have  mostly lived apart since then. Stephen is a mining engineer and worked for years  in Oman before the mine dried up. When he returned home to unemployment, the  best option for the couple was to utilize Elena's background in the care  industry. It would be her turn to make a living abroad--as a nanny.
In La Trinidad, the Bautistas' apartment is clean and bright. There's a new  television, a modern stereo and a laptop -- a gift from the Robertsons.  Stephen's jeans and Ralph Lauren T-shirt look new. Cherry-May and Chrystal are  also well dressed and tidy.
Dozens of the family's neighbours also work overseas.
"That one's in Germany," Stephen says pointing to a nearby house. "This one  is in Switzerland. There, they live in Hong Kong. That one with the new red roof  is in Canada. This one is in Israel." The homes where someone works abroad are  in notably better condition than those of their stay-at-home neighbours.
But if the cash rewards of leaving home are clear, they come at a heavy  emotional price.
Stephen says he thought the family would be reunited within a couple of years  of his wife leaving La Trinidad. As things stand, the Bautistas still don't know  for certain when they will all move to Toronto.
"I hope we will go this year to join Elena," Stephen says. "I want to go  there for the sake of my children. That's first and foremost."
The Bautistas are hardly unique. Eight million Filipinos work overseas today,  lured from home by developed world wages. Ten per cent of the country's  population is abroad. They send back an estimated US$16-billion each year --  remittances are one of the most fruitful sectors of the Filipino economy and  account for about 10% of the national gross domestic product.
More than 6,000 Filipinas arrive in Canada under the federal government's  live-in caregiver program. They make up more than one in five female immigrants  to Canada and more than nine out of 10 of the live-in caregiver program's  participants.
The program, which began in 1992, is so popular in the Philippines that the  Canadian embassy in Manila struggles to do any other business, says Doug Kellam,  a spokesman for Citizenship and Immigration Canada (CIC).
"It's a success in that it matches a certain need of employers in Canada, and  gives applicants the right to become a permanent resident here when they  otherwise might not qualify for immigration," Kellam explains. Almost all  nannies who move here through this program become permanent residents.
Filipina nannies in Canada also typically work fewer hours than they would  elsewhere -- there are many of them in Hong Kong and the Middle East, for  instance -- and they can earn more here, too.
The program is "a gift," says Audrey Guth, founder of Diamond Personnel. "As  a Canadian I'm very proud of it."
Guth has been recruiting Filipina nannies for two decades. She places "a few  hundred" Filipinas with Canadian families every year. And competition among  agencies has intensified in the past 10 years. In the late '90s, her company was  one of only a couple that went to Hong Kong to recruit Filipinas to Canada; now  there are as many as 40 agencies recruiting there.
"We are the only country in the world that says, 'We have a job that  Canadians aren't particularly interested in doing. So if you come over and do  this job-- which is taking care of our children-- we are going to give
you the gift of permanent residency.' That's the draw," says Guth.
Guth acknowledges nannies who leave their own children behind are making "the  ultimate sacrifice" but there is a payoff, she says. "When a nanny walks into my  office with her whole family that have come here -- that's the feel-good part of  my job."
Participating nannies can stay here for three years initially. They are  required to prove their skills through a mix of qualifications and experience,  and then they must have a sponsor in Canada -- someone who will employ them when  they get here.
Once participants have 24 months of work under their belt in Canada, they can  get permanent residence status and then apply to bring their families here. If  they don't get enough work experience within three years, it's often possible  for a Filipina to extend her stay with other work permits and visas.
The best nannies are highly sought after and some families are reluctant to  let a good one go even years after they expected their kids would no longer need  one.
"They come from an incredibly nurturing culture," Guth explains. "They have  very strong family values. They are well educated, so you are not just getting a  domestic helper as they are called in Hong Kong -- you are getting a teacher, a  nurse, someone who has a lot of education and [knows] English, of course."
Their numbers have reached a kind of critical mass among Toronto's  middle-class households. Filipina nannies are perceived as the gold standard --  reliable, somewhat deferential to their employers and willing
to follow instructions to a T.
"One reason everyone wants a Filipina nanny is because everybody else in the  neighbourhood has one," says one Toronto resident whose kids are cared for by a  Filipina. "And because there are so many other kids with Filipina nannies, it's  easier to get a play-date for your kids, too."
But while Canadian parents and children have fallen in love with their  Filipina nannies, some nannies say their working conditions can be less than  perfect.
Bautista counts herself lucky to have employers like the Robertsons. When she  gathers with other Filipina nannies to socialize -- anyone who lives in the band  of middle class housing north of the downtown core will likely have seen groups  of Filipino women out for walks on their weekends off
chat about abusive employers, naughty kids, immigration wrangles and husbands  who stray back home.
One Toronto mother says she heard "heartbreaking" stories from two nannies  she recently interviewed.
The first woman said she arrived in Toronto recently only to find her  employer/ sponsor had hired someone else in her place, leaving her without a job  and in breach of the conditions of her visa.
The other interviewee said she left her previous employers -- a doctor and  lawyer --after they wanted her to move out of their house but stay on as their  nanny for the same wages she'd earned as a live-in, effectively adding a huge  rent cost to her expenses without any increase in her income. (Live-in nannies  earn about $1,500 a month, though they do not pay for lodging.)
The live-in caregiver program can be "a hostage situation" because nannies  rely on employment for their immigration status, says this Toronto mother. "I  think some employers take advantage of that."
There are also rumours of unscrupulous agents luring nannies to Canada for a  fee even though there's no job when the nanny gets here, as well as people in  the Philippines who offer "accredited" training that is little more than an  expensive scam.
Both negative and positive cases aside, there are a number of concerns with  the live-in caregiver program, says Geraldine Pratt, a professor at the  University of British Columbia who has been studying Canada's live-in caregiver  program for more than a decade.
"Most people will say domestic workers are really well treated by Canadian  families, and maybe they are. But they are still working under conditions that  Canadians won't work under. Canadians will not work in people's homes for the  wages that live-in caregivers are paid."
There is also a concern about skill loss. Many of the women who come here  were teachers or nurses back home; they end up "deskilled" after years of  nannying, so even with permanent residence status, they are stuck with  lower-level jobs. "It's a very serious loss of skills -- for the women who come  here and for Canada," Pratt says.
The UBC professor's most recent research also looks at the experience of  Filipino families once they are reunified in Canada.
"Their kids aren't doing that well, and that's really heartbreaking because  when you speak to women who come through this program often they say they are  doing this for their kids," she says.
Pratt's research suggests there is a very high school drop-out rate among  Filipino kids who come to Canada. There is a "profound sense of family  dislocation" because of the length of time mothers are separated from their  children -- as long as eight years in some cases. When the children arrive, the  mothers frequently work long hours or have multiple jobs, making it more  difficult to re-establish family connections. Their children also feel obligated  to leave school and get out into the workforce as early as possible to help make  ends meet.
Pratt is also concerned the women who come here are often unaware of exactly  how long it will take to get through the immigration process.
"I have met one person who got their family here in three-and-a-half years  �?but just one," she says.
Bautista says there is a lot of misinformation in the Philippines. Some  Filipino nanny agencies tell recruits it only takes a couple of years to bring  their families here. Sometimes nannies are encouraged to put false information  on their visa applications to speed up the initial immigration process, but this  only causes more problems later on when their families want to follow.
Our federal government should accept some responsibility, too, Pratt  says.
"I don't think the Canadian government says clearly it might take five or six  years," she says.
CIC's Kellam says the government does a lot to make sure nannies coming from  the Philippines are well-informed, with orientation sessions held in Manila, for  instance. There are also a number of support groups in cities throughout  Canada.
Back in Don Mills, Bautista is hardly complaining about her lot, despite the  long separation from her family.
Stephen and the two girls have already taken medical examinations that are  part of the immigration process, and the family is hopeful they will be reunited  this year. Once they arrive, Bautista wants to move up the career ladder,  perhaps leaving nannying for a higher-paying health care position.
She's already started worrying about how her kids will adapt to life here --  "I've told them they will have to work hard in school, but it will be worth it,"  she says -- and is trying to figure out how she will pay for Chrystal and  Cherry-May to attend college. With her salary, it's a concern, but with Stephen  working, there will be more money to go around. Besides, adds Bautista, "like my  husband says, 'We'll cross that bridge when we come to it.' "
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