Anonymous wrote:We pay a more for one child ($30 an hour) with 20 hours guaranteed (3 hours a day and 5 for date night) as we wanted a fluency in a second language (not Spanish so harder to find).
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:We're going to look for an after-school nanny for two elementary-aged kids starting this fall. We're thinking 15 guaranteed hours a week (three a day plus a few extra hours on one night for a date night each week), basically pick up kids at the bus (next to our house), help with homework, playtime, kids laundry. If you have a similar arrangement, I'd love to hear what hourly rate you've had success with.
If you want her to do laundry, consider extending the hours one of the days. She can come in earlier and do the laundry before getting the kids. Part of your post is confusing. You say guarantee 15 hours. But you also say 3 hours per day plus staying late for a date night. 3 hours * 5 days = 15 hours. You left out the date night hours.
Not sure where you got confused. Guaranteed hours aren't free hours, OP is saying she will employ nanny for 15 hours a week generally, but is guaranteeing her all 15 in the event that MB comes home early or takes the kids on a 3 day weekend trip or something. You seem to be confused that OP was guaranteeing 15 hours but also expecting 15 hours of work...
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:We're going to look for an after-school nanny for two elementary-aged kids starting this fall. We're thinking 15 guaranteed hours a week (three a day plus a few extra hours on one night for a date night each week), basically pick up kids at the bus (next to our house), help with homework, playtime, kids laundry. If you have a similar arrangement, I'd love to hear what hourly rate you've had success with.
If you want her to do laundry, consider extending the hours one of the days. She can come in earlier and do the laundry before getting the kids. Part of your post is confusing. You say guarantee 15 hours. But you also say 3 hours per day plus staying late for a date night. 3 hours * 5 days = 15 hours. You left out the date night hours.
Anonymous wrote:We're going to look for an after-school nanny for two elementary-aged kids starting this fall. We're thinking 15 guaranteed hours a week (three a day plus a few extra hours on one night for a date night each week), basically pick up kids at the bus (next to our house), help with homework, playtime, kids laundry. If you have a similar arrangement, I'd love to hear what hourly rate you've had success with.
Anonymous wrote:How does this arrangement work for all the days that school is out and when the kid is sick?
Anonymous wrote:How does this arrangement work for all the days that school is out and when the kid is sick?