'They're underpaid to do a dirty job': Dog lover gets hired at doggie daycare filled with burnt-out employees, then shares the gritty reality behind your pup's playtime

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    Woman playing with dogs at doggie daycare including 'I would absolutely never send my own dog to one unless I had no other choice.'
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    I work at a dog daycare and it's my first time working at one so I dont really know the 'etiquette' of staff, but I always assumed it should be similar to treating all of the dogs as if they were your own
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    The daycare staff usually always acts fed up with the dogs and is telling them to shut up if they even bark a couple times. Or if they howl (we have a husky) they get mad at all the noise they make. I get stopping barking behaviors when it's constant, but idk I thought barking or howling was normal behavior they could do from time to time.
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    Maybe I'm overreacting lol bc I've never actually worked at one before but they just seem like they hate their jobs and the dogs sooo much but they always greet them when they first arrive with "hey! (Insert dog name)" but it devolves into suchhhh annoyance
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    I usually handle the dog care side sometimes and idk I'm not that easily bothered because... they're dogs. And some dogs are rowdy.
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    OktoberStorms 18h ago Weird Animals . Yeah, after working at a daycare as a teenager, I would absolutely never send my own dog to one unless I had no other choice.
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    Man in suit disciplining dog
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    Cultural_Side_9677 • 17h ago My dog went to a test at a local daycare. She was a tentative and needed one more test before a decision. I watched the cameras when she was there. Based on what I
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    saw on camera, I already made the decision that she would not attend. A dog was pestering her, but she was deemed to be the problem. She was put in a different area and forgotten about. They said she didn't interact with the
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    attendant, but she was trying to and pushed away. I was honestly stunned by what I saw. Im shocked the place has such a great reputation based on my viewing.
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    madele44. 16h ago I've worked in daycares where we had to control noise level due to complaints from neighboring businesses. If the dogs started barking, and a "shhhh" didn't work, we definitely yelled over them.
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    Burn out is real. Daycare jobs seem really fun until you realize it's 90% cleaning. People come in thinking it will be easy, and then they're underpaid to do a dirty job. I rarely saw people last more than 6 months in a daycare. You can tell when they're burned out and over it.
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    Striking_Balance7667 17h ago . I worked at one and all the daycare workers were lovely people who treated the dogs with kindness and care. Yes getting annoyed sometimes but never taking it out on the dogs. The main problem is that there were too many dogs to give each enough attention
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    Now the business owner was a horrible nightmare, treated everyone like sh including some of the customers. When she had a dog alone though, if she didn't baby talk it and treat it like something precious lol.
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    Dogs waiting for training outside
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    Rest_In_Many_Pieces 17h ago Dog Trainer - Owned by a Wh... Have worked in similar places like this (salons, kennels) and have seen many people treat dogs like this (and worse in salons). It's very demotivating. I like working with behaviour problems because of horrible people.
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    DrOcean 14h ago . I used to work at a dog daycare as a lead. I made sure this was not the culture because I'd seen it at boarding facilities. I'd tell new employees to let them bark because this is where they're allowed to.
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    We wouldn't let them get stuck at barking at the lawn guy though. We would let them alert and everyone would come over to bark at him for a bit. Then we would break it up because too much of that will rowel up the whole group.
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    I'd remind the staff that barking is their natural communication style and educate them about the shortcomings of muting a dog. I'd encourage the staff to distract the dog or redirect their attention if they were barking too much.
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    NumerousAd79.13h ago I send my dog to a daycare where most of the staff is folks in job coaching programs (young adults with developmental disa ities). It seems good and my dog likes it there. There's a core staff of typically functioning adults as well.
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    EvilDan69 14h ago . Shadow: Old English Bulldogge My guess is that it gets old fast. 2 bark can turn into the whole daycare barking/howling. If they consistently know the staff/leaders would be displeased, it cuts down on the behavior. As long as there is no ab e, and they're just insisting on quiet, its probably fine.
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    Also, I've never send any of my dogs to a daycare. Since I see others posting about that.
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    Fabulous-Reaction488 • 13h ago I think it's like human daycare. You are going to find great and horrible people. Same with nursing homes and hospitals.
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    signguy989 · 11h ago If a human child screams in daycare, the staff stops them or all the kids will start screaming. Dogs are the same, especially if it's a large pack, a little barking can turn into chaos pretty quick.
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    . Dr-nom-de-plume 12h ago I will provide an opposite view. We have a wonderful doggy daycare and our dog is tired and happy a full day there. She lives boarding there too. I can see the salon and play areas when I come in and honestly everyone has been very nice. There are well-run and good daycare out there- I'd start looking.
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    Consistent-Wait9892 · 3h ago Awe that makes me sad. I bet a lot of the employees are there for a while and the others just followed suit and do it. If you stay, which maybe you should to be the kind person the dogs need, just don't fall into the
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    same pattern as them. If it continues I would for sure have to say something or even record it as evidence. If they are that impatient with the dogs maybe they need new jobs without dogs.
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    isayeret 14h ago . Daycare stuff definitely don't handle dogs as their own. It's a mass product and service. There's a reason why Rover.com exists and has taken over globally.
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    tahcamen 12h ago It's like nurses and teachers, most go into the job with good intentions but get worn down by the constant needs of their charges (and all the different personalities, issues, demands of patient/student/dog's relatives, etc.). Eventually the job sks and everyone starts and get resentful of to be said charges. I'd start looking for a new job.

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