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<text id=94TT1656>
<title>
Nov. 28, 1994: Society:Looking for Mary Poppins
</title>
<history>
TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1994
Nov. 28, 1994 Star Trek
</history>
<article>
<source>Time Magazine</source>
<hdr>
SOCIETY, Page 68
Looking for Mary Poppins
</hdr>
<body>
<p> The government moves to regulate the programs that put au pairs
in U.S. homes
</p>
<p>By Jill Smolowe-Reported by Ann Blackman/Washington, Sophfronia Scott Gregory/Charlotte,
Jenifer Mattos/New York, and bureau reports
</p>
<p> The glossy brochure advertising "the best live-in child care
in the world!" had featured energetic European lasses with megawatt
smiles. So Cathy and Thomas Lynch of Wilton, Connecticut, were
perplexed in November 1990 when their Dutch au pair arrived
fearful and miserable. On Day One, Saskia, 21, wept uncontrollably,
but lacked enough English to explain why she was upset. On Day
Two, Saskia expressed shock that she was expected to provide
sole care for the Lynches' two daughters, ages two and four,
while the Lynches were at work; she thought she had come to
America primarily to travel and learn English. On Day Three,
Saskia announced that she wanted to go home--then stopped
speaking English altogether. Baffled, Cathy found an interpreter,
who translated: Saskia said she couldn't be left alone with
the Lynch children.
</p>
<p> When Cathy phoned the sponsoring agency, EF Au Pair of Cambridge,
Massachussetts, she was stunned by their refusal to help. "They
literally told us we could put her out on the street, and that
she could now find her own way home," Cathy recalls. (An agency
spokesman says that she is unfamiliar with the case, but that
the standard response is to "do what we can" to help an au pair
return home.) Instead the Lynches helped Saskia make her travel
arrangements. Then, not wanting to squander their nonrefundable
program fee of roughly $2,700, they demanded a replacement.
This time, they got a 19-year-old Swede who was all the agency
had promised: an English-speaking au pair who provided 12 months
of flexible, dependable child care in exchange for room, board,
a $100 weekly salary, a $300 educational stipend and a round-trip
ticket.
</p>
<p> Heartened by their second au pair experience but now leery of
EF Au Pair, the Lynches then signed with the Connecticut-based
Au Pair in America, another of the eight private agencies designated
by the U.S. Information Agency to match American families with
European au pairs who are between the ages of 18 and 25. Melanie,
19, promptly erected a vast photo shrine of the child she had
cared for back home in England, then cried and cried. Three
days later, an agency counselor visited and suggested that Melanie
leave within 24 hours. Exit Melanie, enter Katja, a 22-year-old
German who failed to watch the Lynch girls when they swam at
the beach. Katja also couldn't drive, though her application
stated otherwise. Worn out, Cathy dismissed Katja within three
weeks, quit her nursing job and became a full-time mom. Her
conclusion: "Scrap the whole au pair program. It's just plain
bad."
</p>
<p> The Lynches' experience is not one of those sensational au-pair-from-hell
stories that make for splashy headlines and breathless movies-of-the-week.
Yet it is typical enough in the annals of live-in babysitters
to give pause to any family seeking an au pair. A number of
the eight agencies that have placed 40,094 au pairs in American
homes since 1986 say between 20% and 30% of their placements
don't work out. Unhappy au pairs complain that they are lonely
and treated like slaves. Discontented parents speak of au pairs
who are immature, irresponsible or mentally unstable. Both sides
fault the agencies for sloppy screening procedures and poor
follow-through when troubles arise.
</p>
<p> The most common problem, though, is a mismatch of expectations.
The au pairs, nearly all of whom are female, think they're embarking
on a cultural adventure; the hosts, who are mostly two-income
couples, think they're getting cheap, legal, full-time help.
"It's sold abroad as a great way to experience American culture,
and here as a great way to get inexpensive child care," says
Senator Patrick Leahy, a Vermont Democrat. "You're bound to
have problems."
</p>
<p> Leahy turned his attention to the au pair program in 1993 after
one of his former staffers discovered that her then four-year-old
son had been photographed in the nude by Stefan Kahl, 26, a
German au pair. Kahl was subsequently convicted of child molestation
and deported. Leahy suspected that such abuse was not unique
and began investigating. Then last August, Dutch au pair Anna-Corina
Peeze, 19, whose case goes before a grand jury next month, was
charged with involuntary manslaughter after her charge, eight-week-old
Brenton Devonshire of Ashburn, Virginia, was shaken to death.
A week later, the Cleveland Plain Dealer ran a series that documented
some 300 cases of trouble in au pair placement. Leahy seized
on the publicity to introduce legislation requiring the USIA
to actively regulate au pair programs.
</p>
<p> A draft of these new regulations, obtained by TIME, indicates
that the USIA intends to clamp down on screening, training and
work requirements for au pairs. Under the new guidelines, scheduled
to go into effect Jan. 1, all families must submit to a background
check, including employment and personal references. The au
pairs must be English-speaking high school graduates who have
passed both a physical examination and a criminal-record check.
Their training, which in most cases consists of a single agency-sponsored
orientation day, will be boosted to 40 hours. To better enforce
the rule that restricts the au pair work week to 45 hours, families
will have to sign a contract that specifies days and hours,
and agency representatives will be required to contact the au
pairs weekly. Au pair salaries will be boosted to $155 a week.
</p>
<p> The USIA draft also restricts au pairs to homes where the children
are at least two years old--but that is likely to change.
In the wake of agency complaints that the rule would cut their
business almost by half, the USIA is considering a three-month-old
age limit, but with the proviso that only au pairs over age
21 can work with children younger than two. Three agencies contacted
by TIME also questioned the extended hours of child-care and
safety training, arguing that this will drive up the program's
costs and price out many middle-income families.
</p>
<p> All this can't help taxing the patience of the USIA, which never
intended to get into the baby-sitting business in the first
place. When two entrepreneurial au pair agencies approached
the USIA in 1986 and asked that their programs be designated
as a "cultural exchange"--thus simplifying the au pair visa
process--the USIA agreed only to a two-year trial. That pilot
convinced the USIA that the program was too work-oriented to
be a true cultural exchange. But its repeated efforts to fob
the program off on the Labor Department or have it killed outright
have met with failure. While the USIA has no investigative or
disciplinary authority to enforce its new rules, the eight agencies
have great incentive to cooperate: the program comes up for
congressional reauthorization in September. "We have a big club
hanging over their heads," says USIA director Joseph Duffey.
"Congress could close it down."
</p>
<p> If the program is to survive, veteran au pairs and host families
say, agencies must tighten up procedures all around. Although
the brochures claim that applicants are carefully screened,
au pairs commonly state that their references were never checked;
some even boast about having had relatives write fake recommendations.
Other common deceptions include hiding a smoking habit, lying
about a driver's license or misrepresenting mastery of English.
Kathy Farno, whose short-lived Swiss au pair arrived in Maryland
with just 10 words of English, says the girl initially hid her
language deficit "by having her sister do the writing" on the
application.
</p>
<p> Those applications, which showcase a candidate's strengths,
don't hint at the problems she may be fleeing. LeAnn and Michael
Kerr of Charlotte, North Carolina, initially thought they had
found a dream companion for their two young daughters in Merete,
18. But after Merete settled in, she began to speak of family
problems back home in Denmark that included emotional abuse.
Over time, LeAnn noticed that Merete would grow very agitated
and develop stomachaches after phoning home. In March 1993,
nine months into her stay, Merete tried to kill herself with
an overdose of pills. After Merete spent a week in the hospital,
the Kerrs helped her return home. Last August they received
a letter from Merete's mother. "It said, `I'm sorry to inform
you Merete is dead,'" says LeAnn. "It went on to say she walked
in front of a train. I can't describe what I felt."
</p>
<p> At the time of Merete's suicide attempt, the Kerrs ran into
another common dilemma: the failure of agencies to step in when
problems arise. LeAnn says the local counselor who was supposed
to check in with Merete on a weekly basis "never called" and
"never went to see her," even after the girl was hospitalized.
Furious, LeAnn phoned the San Francisco headquarters of Merete's
sponsoring agency, AuPairCare. "They gave her no support," LeAnn
says. "They just wanted her to go home, and the problem would
be done." Diane DuToit, the agency's program manager, counters
that Merete "seemed very happy" until her departure time neared,
and that the agency's local coordinator did pay a hospital visit.
</p>
<p> At least Merete went home. Because it "isn't profitable" to
send girls home, says a disgruntled former agency counselor,
"it's always, `Well, find them another home.'" Becky and T.J.
McManamy of Charlotte, who went through seven au pairs in four
years--two good, five bad--say they let go of Lindsey, an
aloof Briton, after she told them, "Your children are not safe
with me." When the McManamys tried to pass that disturbing remark
on to AuPairCare--first by phone, then by certified letter--the agency didn't respond. DuToit now says the McManamys
misinterpreted Lindsey's remark.
</p>
<p> Subsequently Lindsey was posted to a family that was in the
process of adopting a second child. According to two people
familiar with that case, Lindsey's refusal to submit to a background
check by the adoption agency cost the couple their new infant.
When the couple later reapplied to the adoption agency, they
had to provide a letter from AuPairCare stating that Lindsey
would not be in the home.
</p>
<p> The view from the au pair side of the equation is not much prettier.
Au pair means "on a par," and is intended to remind the hosts
that their young guests should be treated as family members,
not employees. The rules are clear: au pairs are to get a private
room, meals, two weeks' vacation and a full weekend off every
fourth week. They are not supposed to work more than 45 hours
a week and are not expected to do general housework or meal
preparation for the family.
</p>
<p> Tell that to Rachel, 19, an Irish au pair who felt like a slave
while working for a family in Manhattan. Rachel found herself
cleaning out the refrigerator, washing Venetian blinds, even
scrubbing old stains from the living room rug. Those specialty
services were layered on top of her daily responsibilities:
minding the family's three children, washing the dishes, vacuuming.
Moreover, Rachel says because there was never enough to eat
in the house, she shelled out about $35 each week to keep herself
and the children adequately fed. Rachel hung on eight months,
then bolted. "I finally realized I'm not a Cinderella," she
says. "This is not something I have to do." Instead of taking
up her agency's offer to place her in another home, Rachel found
a family herself. That choice cost her the $500 "good-faith"
deposit required of all au pairs, since she did not finish out
her full 12 months.
</p>
<p> While Rachel had the gumption to quit, other young women feel
trapped--and that can lead to grave consequences. "In many
cases, the girls are already disturbed and running away from
something," says Joyce Egginton, author of Circle of Fire, a
new book that disputes the 1992 acquittal of Olivia Riner, a
Swiss au pair who was charged with setting the fire that killed
her three-month-old charge. "If the girl is feeling desperately
cut off, depressed and alone, the babies are at great risk."
</p>
<p> And just as troubled au pairs are recycled, so are problem families.
The McManamys provided temporary shelter to two AuPairCare hires,
both in flight from the same couple. The first au pair complained
of a domineering husband and a jealous wife. Her successor charged
that the husband had made sexual advances and the wife had refused
to speak to her. Becky, who helped the first go home and the
second find a better job, says the agency failed to assist in
either case. More common, an agency will attribute the problem
to "incompatibility," and try to rematch both sides of the equation.
</p>
<p> While agencies don't deny that problems arise, they stress that
happy endings are far more common than horror stories. And that,
no doubt, is true. Thos and Lisa Paine of Belle Mead, New Jersey,
for instance, have had mostly happy outcomes with their nine
au pairs. "We worked with them to try to accommodate their schedule,"
says Thos. "We always invited them to spend holidays with us
and got them presents." The Paines also never forgot that they
were dealing with kids, not mature nannies. Like many couples,
they have suffered their share of fender benders, missed curfews
and boyfriend woes. "You come down and find people groping on
the couch," Thos laughs. "If you can't handle the hormones,
don't get into the program."
</p>
<p> The Paines and other satisfied host families caution that everyone
needs to be more clear-eyed. They urge families to interview
applicants by phone, check out references and bear in mind that
families will get from the experience what they put into it.
Despite their own checkered history, the McManamys say when
it works well, the program can serve both the au pairs who want
an affordable adventure abroad and the families who need affordable
child care. "When you have a good au pair, it's a benefit to
the household," says T.J. And, Becky adds, "It's a sad day when
a good one leaves."
</p>
</body>
</article>
</text>