Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Some people have a hard time remembering this is a business relationship. I would not be happy being asked to pay thousands of dollars for a service I am not receiving. It has nothing to do with how much you like your teacher.
+1. Not to mention the flip side: How long would they let you stay in the daycare if you had a financial hardship and were unable to pay? My guess is they're not going to. Or will they watch the kids for free while you go for a job interview? Doubt it.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:My sister works in a pre-K and if the additional $600/wk in unemployment is true than she’ll be better off getting laid off. Her school is trying to use tuition to continue to pay them, which is nice but I don’t think sustainable.
It depends. The teachers at my preschool get paid $14-$28, so yeah, the teacher at the $14 rate will ironically get paid more by UE than salary.
But what about the 50+ year old teacher who has been with the center 25 years to get her pay to $28/hr? She would not want to get on UE. My preschool gave us a 30 percent discount to pay teachers. So we've paid $2,200 so far for no services since mid March. But how long can certain families continue? The cost easily adds up to $6k for 4 months, for just one kid.
Anonymous wrote:My sister works in a pre-K and if the additional $600/wk in unemployment is true than she’ll be better off getting laid off. Her school is trying to use tuition to continue to pay them, which is nice but I don’t think sustainable.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I just want them to restructure it into a donation so I can deduct on my taxes. I've emailed our non-profit daycare center's executive board and they have not responded with an acknowledgement.
They are expecting payment but this seems like an easy way to lessen the burden on all parties. I want them to get paid, but give me something in return. I'll let my accountant figure out the legality.
Sorry, pp, but that is not a donation. Donations are gifts where you get nothing of value in return, so if it is used to hold your spot or offset tuition due in the future, or whatever benefit you would want, then it doesn't work as a donation. I feel your pain, I really do. I think OP is completely oblivious of the lives most of us are living.
I was hoping for this too. We are really getting nothing in return for ours. 2 kids at a school that we aren't returning to next year. So it feels a lot like $5K+ donation to me that I can't write off. Ugh.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I just want them to restructure it into a donation so I can deduct on my taxes. I've emailed our non-profit daycare center's executive board and they have not responded with an acknowledgement.
They are expecting payment but this seems like an easy way to lessen the burden on all parties. I want them to get paid, but give me something in return. I'll let my accountant figure out the legality.
Sorry, pp, but that is not a donation. Donations are gifts where you get nothing of value in return, so if it is used to hold your spot or offset tuition due in the future, or whatever benefit you would want, then it doesn't work as a donation. I feel your pain, I really do. I think OP is completely oblivious of the lives most of us are living.
Anonymous wrote:At this point, any daycare/preschool needs to be furloughing its staff, who can all get generous unemployment. Then reduce the monthly tuition to the bare minimum necessary to keep the doors open. I probably would not continue to pay past this week if they didn't do so.
Anonymous wrote:At this point, any daycare/preschool needs to be furloughing its staff, who can all get generous unemployment. Then reduce the monthly tuition to the bare minimum necessary to keep the doors open. I probably would not continue to pay past this week if they didn't do so.
Anonymous wrote:Some people have a hard time remembering this is a business relationship. I would not be happy being asked to pay thousands of dollars for a service I am not receiving. It has nothing to do with how much you like your teacher.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:how can you say you love the teachers and support them all throughout the year, but once adversity hits your school you quibble over a few hundred dollars to ensure they get paid? I understand if someone is in true financial distress, but if you are still working, how can you do that?
A few hundred?! OP, we are currently paying FULL tuition, 1,800 a month PLUS paying our nanny generously to watch two children instead of one. It is most definitely tough on our finances. We have paid for March and will be paying for April, and are happy our teachers are getting paid, but don't make it sound like just it's that easy.
The elites rage on.
I know you comfort yourself but thinking that... not sure where you read rage into my reply, but you have got to take a breath. We're pretty solidly middle class (or what DCUM calls poor... HHI under 200K). We are just living very frugally and not saving anything during the kid years.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:how can you say you love the teachers and support them all throughout the year, but once adversity hits your school you quibble over a few hundred dollars to ensure they get paid? I understand if someone is in true financial distress, but if you are still working, how can you do that?
A few hundred?! OP, we are currently paying FULL tuition, 1,800 a month PLUS paying our nanny generously to watch two children instead of one. It is most definitely tough on our finances. We have paid for March and will be paying for April, and are happy our teachers are getting paid, but don't make it sound like just it's that easy.
The elites rage on.
Anonymous wrote:I just want them to restructure it into a donation so I can deduct on my taxes. I've emailed our non-profit daycare center's executive board and they have not responded with an acknowledgement.
They are expecting payment but this seems like an easy way to lessen the burden on all parties. I want them to get paid, but give me something in return. I'll let my accountant figure out the legality.