Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:OP- How were you normally going to find summer care that is less than that? I'm a teacher and hopefully I can find a summer nanny job. My own kid is old enough to be alone by himself and I need the money.
Camps are $150-200/week per child. Max $400/week. College student will run $600-800/week ($15-20 per hour).
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:You are making entirely too much effort here. The go to answer, at least here, seems to be to demand that 100% telework be allowed until camps/schools reopen.
100% telework doesn’t help with the fact that my 3 and 5 year old need to be supervised, fed, and kept busy.
A thousand times, this. I can't be 100% on for work when I also need to be 100% on supervising my 3 year old. I'm lucky my work is being flexible about hours, so long as the work gets done. But DH? No, he works for a bank and they demand he be fully available for client calls from 8 am to 6 pm, no excuses. And the client calls are constant right now, as you might imagine for someone who does small business banking. That means I spend 8 to 6 attempting to juggle work and kid and making meals and general house stuff (poorly, I might add), scarf down dinner at 6:05 and then work until 11 pm or so when my brain just can't process anything any more. Every. Single. Day. And I'm supposed to do this for months?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I have heard this solution proposed several times. This seems to be the solution to summer for a lot of working parents, if camps are closed and offices are open.
But how are we supposed to find some random college kid that: a) we can trust enough to leave our young children with for hours each day... during a pandemic; b) is not an asymptomatic carrier; c) is willing to watch kids and risk exposure to the virus from our family; and d) we can afford? Even at $15/hour, which I assume would be the bare minimum for a college student, that's $600 per week (8 hrs/day, 5 days/week).
Please explain how you plan to make this work for your family. Are you already doing searches, putting out feelers? Would you hire via a phone interview?? I am having a hard time with the entire idea, but it may be one of our only options.
$600 a week....how many kids do you have? How much does the camp you have them signed up for cost? I thought most full day camps were at least $300/week per kid? And since you say "children" I'm assuming you have at least two...so wouldn't you be paying at least $600/week anyway?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Post job at local college. Conduct phone/zoom interview. Call references. Yes, it’s expensive.
Colleges are closed. How would you post and who would see it?
Anonymous wrote:OP- How were you normally going to find summer care that is less than that? I'm a teacher and hopefully I can find a summer nanny job. My own kid is old enough to be alone by himself and I need the money.
Anonymous wrote:I have heard this solution proposed several times. This seems to be the solution to summer for a lot of working parents, if camps are closed and offices are open.
But how are we supposed to find some random college kid that: a) we can trust enough to leave our young children with for hours each day... during a pandemic; b) is not an asymptomatic carrier; c) is willing to watch kids and risk exposure to the virus from our family; and d) we can afford? Even at $15/hour, which I assume would be the bare minimum for a college student, that's $600 per week (8 hrs/day, 5 days/week).
Please explain how you plan to make this work for your family. Are you already doing searches, putting out feelers? Would you hire via a phone interview?? I am having a hard time with the entire idea, but it may be one of our only options.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:You are making entirely too much effort here. The go to answer, at least here, seems to be to demand that 100% telework be allowed until camps/schools reopen.
100% telework doesn’t help with the fact that my 3 and 5 year old need to be supervised, fed, and kept busy.