Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I have four kids and was a SAHM when I had a part time nanny from 2-7pm. I really mostly needed someone to help with laundry and then the two younger ones while I focused on the two older after school, and then to switch and bathe the two youngest before leaving. We started out paying $15 an hour and gave a $1 raise every six months.
Sounds like a mother's helper if you were home most of the time.
I was running the older two around a lot.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I have four kids and was a SAHM when I had a part time nanny from 2-7pm. I really mostly needed someone to help with laundry and then the two younger ones while I focused on the two older after school, and then to switch and bathe the two youngest before leaving. We started out paying $15 an hour and gave a $1 raise every six months.
Sounds like a mother's helper if you were home most of the time.
Anonymous wrote:I have four kids and was a SAHM when I had a part time nanny from 2-7pm. I really mostly needed someone to help with laundry and then the two younger ones while I focused on the two older after school, and then to switch and bathe the two youngest before leaving. We started out paying $15 an hour and gave a $1 raise every six months.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Nannies don't clean your house.
Who are you? You post this on every thread where someone mentions looking for someone to do a combination of child care and housekeeping. Some people actually like that kind of job. If you would like us to call that person something different, please advise.
It sounds like you can't find the kind of job you want. That's not the fault of people looking to hire someone to do both.
Anonymous wrote:Nannies don't clean your house.
Anonymous wrote:You want a mother's helper. I would advertise on university job boards and on Care and Craigslist. Include that you are ideally looking for someone who would be interested in full time over the summer, but be open to the idea that you'd just keep your afternoon person and supplement.
If you can swing 20 hours/wk, it's not a bad gig. You could add some errands or housekeeping, or starting dinner if that would help, for the hour before school pick up.
Anonymous wrote:The important thing to remember here is that you are paying both for the nanny's time, and for any prior experience. And you are right, part time positions have a higher hourly rate than full time because the commuting costs and opportunity costs (not available for FT work) are considered. A 3 hour a day gig where metro costs eat up the first hour's wage is not terribly attractive.