Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:They would need to have the nanny cleared by the child welfare agency when they go through the home study If the nanny quit/replaced they'd have to find someone willing to do it again. I doubt the state will pay for a nanny so it would be out of pocket or through the stipend they receive for the child. They should pay one rate and if a child comes in/out continue the rate as the nanny relies on that income and they never know when a kid is coming as often it is short notice. Reality is they should expect to take a few days off with each new placement.
This! I’ve talked with a social worker as the potential nanny, and they are far more likely to place kids with a family who employs a nanny if the nanny is a live-in, that way they run the nanny’s paperwork as a third adult in the household and the nanny does the same training the parents do. There’s no stipend for the nanny from the state, but it can be used for whichever daycare the child attended prior to going to that family, which may involve nanny driving the child a good distance and the child being at the familiar daycare for 2-3 hours per day (for consistency, this is what the family who wanted to hire me wanted to do).