And mine is a teenage Intermediate level, skating at most 7 hours a week plus roughly 45 mins of off-ice a day, landing 2A and some triples. At least one day a week with no skating at all. We have a spin coach, a transitions coach, a choreographer, and a base coach; they all coordinate together. 15 minute lessons are the rule, and only the base coach is daily: the others are spread out.
Coaches vary in ice time recommendations; our coach does not want her skaters training that many hours, particulary the pre-pubescent to pubescent, as she is concerned about over-training; burnout; and prefers intense, effective on-ice time to lots of ice time. Plus, she expects academic excellence, as it means that the skater has a well-balanced life; encourages outside activities; and will not let her skaters miss school for skating.
Note that this is a National level coach. It's her philosophy; it produces excellent skaters; and every coach will vary. So, don't worry about it until you get there ... you'll find a coach who fits your focus and your child, and maybe it will be one who wants 15 hours a week, maybe it won't be.