We couldn't pay $20 so we pay 17 (plus 5 hours overtime at 1.5x the rate) and found a way to make it work for everyone. Nanny has breakfast and lunch at our house, and two days a week, she cooks dinner for the whole family, and is also welcome to stay for dinner or take her portion of dinner home. We shop for the foods she likes and she's welcome to help herself to anything else. We also pay her health insurance and we give four (4) weeks vacation, two her choice, two our choice, plus 5 sick days (although to be honest if she got genuinely sick for up to 10, we would still cover her). She's happy, we're happy, etc. Sometimes the hourly rate is misleading about the quality of the "package." |
Seeing how easy it is explains why people think they can offer you $12/hr. Lol. |
What you are paid is a separate matter, that's between you and your employer. But don't say that taking care of a healthy newborn is hard because it just isn't. |
Ugh... you again. Come up with a new line, PP. |
I agree. Talking and getting nothing back is the hardest and loneliest. Add colic on top of that and I would rather take a roomful of toddlers! |
You find a nanny you want, and you ask her what her rates are. See what she tells you... |
They aren't awake long enough for you to be tired of getting nothing back. Colic isn't part of the deal with healthy newborns. I don't believe you if you say you prefer a roomful of toddlers to a newborn who naps for 3 hrs after 15 minutes of awake time. It's just a figure of speech for you. |