Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:In my experience, she won't get that, especially in the suburbs. If you look at the White House Nannies job board, she can see the qualifications and pay ranges. The first post right now is a full time nanny in Fairfax in the $30-35 range. That is the most inflated prices in the area, so if wants the most money, that is the way to go. If she doesn't qualify through WHN, then she probably won't get $30+ an hour.
Op here. Is WHN particular about who they hire? She's wonderful but English is not her first language and she's more of a caregiver, not a teacher. I'll let her know about WHN, thank you.
Is she fluent in English?
Anonymous wrote:I'm asking this seriously for my nanny who we will not be needing starting in September. Her current pay rate with us is $32/hr and she expressed concern over finding another job in that range. She said the agency she is with does not have many jobs in that pay range and the ones that do are in the city or prefer people with degrees. We found her on care.com but she said she has not had much luck there either. Any other sites or agencies? Anyone on here looking for a nanny around that time? We're in the Fairfax suburbs so she's hoping to find something in that area.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:They do t exist. I have 20+ years experience, a degree and impeccable references and it’s like pulling teeth to get a position at 25$ an hour. Most nannies are taking cheaper rates and I know some doing shares for 25$ which makes it harder for nannies to actually get a living wage.
I'm so sorry to hear that. I figure you'd want to pay someone that is caring for your kids a good wage.
I'm not trying to be rude, but what is a "good wage?" In Virginia, minimum wage is $12/hr. People get paid signifcantly more than minimum wage if they have specific skills, education, or experience that commands it. Sometimes people get paid significantly more than minimum wage if they will be working in a time/location that is undesirable, for example people who work graveyard shift or in hazardous conditions.
Do either of these describe your nanny or the jobs she is seeking? I'm not saying nannies should only be paid minimum wage, but 250% more?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:They do t exist. I have 20+ years experience, a degree and impeccable references and it’s like pulling teeth to get a position at 25$ an hour. Most nannies are taking cheaper rates and I know some doing shares for 25$ which makes it harder for nannies to actually get a living wage.
I'm so sorry to hear that. I figure you'd want to pay someone that is caring for your kids a good wage.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:In my experience, she won't get that, especially in the suburbs. If you look at the White House Nannies job board, she can see the qualifications and pay ranges. The first post right now is a full time nanny in Fairfax in the $30-35 range. That is the most inflated prices in the area, so if wants the most money, that is the way to go. If she doesn't qualify through WHN, then she probably won't get $30+ an hour.
Op here. Is WHN particular about who they hire? She's wonderful but English is not her first language and she's more of a caregiver, not a teacher. I'll let her know about WHN, thank you.
Anonymous wrote:They do t exist. I have 20+ years experience, a degree and impeccable references and it’s like pulling teeth to get a position at 25$ an hour. Most nannies are taking cheaper rates and I know some doing shares for 25$ which makes it harder for nannies to actually get a living wage.
Anonymous wrote:In my experience, she won't get that, especially in the suburbs. If you look at the White House Nannies job board, she can see the qualifications and pay ranges. The first post right now is a full time nanny in Fairfax in the $30-35 range. That is the most inflated prices in the area, so if wants the most money, that is the way to go. If she doesn't qualify through WHN, then she probably won't get $30+ an hour.