Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I am so impressed with all of you who can sit in judgment of people who would HIRE someone to drive their kid to a practice. You must have some really great lives that you have the ability to come and go from work as you please in the late afternoons.
Yes, I chose to make less and to work part time. I chose less money for more spare time.[/quote
How nice that you can afford this. Not everyone can.
And presumably you have a spouse who carries the insurance. Not an option in my case.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I am so impressed with all of you who can sit in judgment of people who would HIRE someone to drive their kid to a practice. You must have some really great lives that you have the ability to come and go from work as you please in the late afternoons.
Yes, I chose to make less and to work part time. I chose less money for more spare time.[/quote
How nice that you can afford this. Not everyone can.
Anonymous wrote:I am so impressed with all of you who can sit in judgment of people who would HIRE someone to drive their kid to a practice. You must have some really great lives that you have the ability to come and go from work as you please in the late afternoons.
Anonymous wrote:I pay by the time it takes. Whatever the one way trip is, I double time time and I pay $20 an hour with a minimum of $15 if the trip is s a fractional hour. Pay too low and you lose your driver and/or get unreliable service.
BTW, I've been using HS kids for years and have never had a problem. No way am I putting a little kid in an Uber.
Anonymous wrote:Teenagers won't be driving my children.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:
You sound like my clueless husband.
Dear God people. My daughter is 14 and will be in HS. Presumably she will be riding in cars in cars with high schoolers from time to time anyways. In any event, the age of the driver does not really pertain to the rate of pay. Feel free to substitute college student in place of high schooler if you wish.
Anonymous wrote:Memories....
When I was a high schooler, I babysat for two little boys from 3 pm to when his mother got home firom work around 6 pm. I remember getting my license, and within weeks, she asked me to drive the boys to McDonalds for dinner because she was working late. I myself was nervous over the responsibility (I was 16) and called my own mother about what to do. MY mother insisted that I did NOT drive those kids anywhere.
Thinking back, I can't believe that mother asked a 16-year-old with a license two weeks old to drive her young children through rush hour traffic.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:My 17 year HS senior drove a 30 mile round trip commute this past school year to/from our local community college and HS. He could have easily handled a 4 mile trip to an after school activity a few nights a week.
I guess it depends on the kid. But that would not have been too much responsibility for my son.
That is fine. That is part of learning to drive and being a responsible adult. Appropriate risk vs. reward.
It is not an appropriate risk to the lives of young children to put them into a car with a teenage driver-- the reward of after school activities is too small. It just isn't worth it.
Anonymous wrote:My 17 year HS senior drove a 30 mile round trip commute this past school year to/from our local community college and HS. He could have easily handled a 4 mile trip to an after school activity a few nights a week.
I guess it depends on the kid. But that would not have been too much responsibility for my son.