A daycare center in Peabody, Massachusetts was ordered to shut down after a toddler wandered off into the street and was found by a local resident. The child was supposed to be under the care of Watch a Tot.
A driver spotted the child in the middle of the street around 8 am. She stopped, picked her up, and brought her to safety, according to the Peabody Police Department.
Police say the daycare was unaware of the child’s whereabouts for at least 25 minutes.
The daycare center was ordered to shut down, and the Department of Children and Families was notified of the incident.
The child was examined by medical kartal escort personnel before being picked up by her mother at the police station.
“Unfortunately, thousands of children experience physical injuries and emotional trauma at the hands of their caretakers every year,” says Mainor Wirth Injury Lawyers. “Child abuse, neglect, and molestation are a harsh reality for many children who are placed in the care of strangers.”
The report comes as cases of daycare abuse and neglect are in focus. Care.com, a popular website used to find babysitters and childcare providers, recently announced that it pulled 47,000 daycare listings. Approximately 45% of the centers in the company’s database were not verified.
The move came after a report from the Wall Street Journal, which found that hundreds of listings weren’t state-licensed as claimed. Some facilities fraudulently claimed to have licenses, while others didn’t exist or the facilities didn’t even realize they were listed on the site.
Care.com does warn its visitors that it doesn’t verify listings and that they only offer limited vetting of caregivers. Customers can purchase more in-depth vetting through their website but must pay additional fees for this service.
Nine people in the listings had police records, according to the report from the Wall Street Journal. At least one child has died in the care of a Care.com-listed daycare owner who had been prohibited from operating an unlicensed facility in Tennessee.
The states with the largest reductions in daycares included Florida, California, Minnesota, Massachusetts, New York, New Jersey, Ohio, North Carolina, Texas, and Pennsylvania.
The Wall Street Journal’s report has already had a negative effect on Care.com’s reputation, as Best Buy reported that it had suspended its relationship with the website. Best Buy’s relationship with Care.com was meant to serve as a new employee benefit for emergency child care. The unsettling report caused the company to call off the partnership and help affected employees cover alternative child-care arrangements.