Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:If you think your nanny isn't on duty and working while she and your children are asleep. And you don't intend to pay her for those hours. She should get to go home for those 8hrs, and leave your young children all alone in the house during the night.
This. It may be "legal", for what reasons, idk, but if your nanny is stupid enough to agree to not being paid while expected to be at work (ie. notin her own bed, not able to do as she please, and still responsible for your kid) then she is an idiot and I'd wonder why you would hire an idiot to care for your child.
I don't think most employers or nannies really would look at it as "I am not being paid for the sleeping hours." Both sides look at the entire amount being paid for the week and decide whether it's worth it to them (in the employer's case - can I pay this and is it worth not keeping my child with me for that week?; in the nanny's case - is this amount worth giving up a week straight of my time?).
As an example, if a nanny's rate was $15/hour - the parents could offer a minimum of $2,220 for a 7-day week of full-time childcare. That's because each "day" counts as 16 hours, so 112 hours of work for the week, with 72 hours of that being overtime. Obviously, assuming the kids are actually sleeping for at least 8 hours a night.
If parents weren't able to deduct sleeping hours, then the minimum legally allowed for a rate of $15/hour would be $3,480 for the week.
I imagine most nanny's wouldn't turn down an occasional offer of over $2,000 for a week of care even if they technically aren't being paid for the nights.
I imagine you could find someone out there to do it for $200. Why pay $2000 when you can pay $200? What a bargain. Lol.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:If you think your nanny isn't on duty and working while she and your children are asleep. And you don't intend to pay her for those hours. She should get to go home for those 8hrs, and leave your young children all alone in the house during the night.
This. It may be "legal", for what reasons, idk, but if your nanny is stupid enough to agree to not being paid while expected to be at work (ie. notin her own bed, not able to do as she please, and still responsible for your kid) then she is an idiot and I'd wonder why you would hire an idiot to care for your child.
I don't think most employers or nannies really would look at it as "I am not being paid for the sleeping hours." Both sides look at the entire amount being paid for the week and decide whether it's worth it to them (in the employer's case - can I pay this and is it worth not keeping my child with me for that week?; in the nanny's case - is this amount worth giving up a week straight of my time?).
As an example, if a nanny's rate was $15/hour - the parents could offer a minimum of $2,220 for a 7-day week of full-time childcare. That's because each "day" counts as 16 hours, so 112 hours of work for the week, with 72 hours of that being overtime. Obviously, assuming the kids are actually sleeping for at least 8 hours a night.
If parents weren't able to deduct sleeping hours, then the minimum legally allowed for a rate of $15/hour would be $3,480 for the week.
I imagine most nanny's wouldn't turn down an occasional offer of over $2,000 for a week of care even if they technically aren't being paid for the nights.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:If you think your nanny isn't on duty and working while she and your children are asleep. And you don't intend to pay her for those hours. She should get to go home for those 8hrs, and leave your young children all alone in the house during the night.
This. It may be "legal", for what reasons, idk, but if your nanny is stupid enough to agree to not being paid while expected to be at work (ie. notin her own bed, not able to do as she please, and still responsible for your kid) then she is an idiot and I'd wonder why you would hire an idiot to care for your child.
I don't think most employers or nannies really would look at it as "I am not being paid for the sleeping hours." Both sides look at the entire amount being paid for the week and decide whether it's worth it to them (in the employer's case - can I pay this and is it worth not keeping my child with me for that week?; in the nanny's case - is this amount worth giving up a week straight of my time?).
As an example, if a nanny's rate was $15/hour - the parents could offer a minimum of $2,220 for a 7-day week of full-time childcare. That's because each "day" counts as 16 hours, so 112 hours of work for the week, with 72 hours of that being overtime. Obviously, assuming the kids are actually sleeping for at least 8 hours a night.
If parents weren't able to deduct sleeping hours, then the minimum legally allowed for a rate of $15/hour would be $3,480 for the week.
I imagine most nanny's wouldn't turn down an occasional offer of over $2,000 for a week of care even if they technically aren't being paid for the nights.
If nanny normally works 50-60 hours per week, throwing a couple of hours of overtime at her for giving up her life for a week (boyfriend, husband, kids, friends, social activities, sleep in her own freaking bed, real food besides whatever nonsense kids eat and frozen pizzas you left, etc) is NOT attractive. I know it seems like a lot when you're paying it out of pocket, but its not when you're the one sacrificing your time. Even salaried workers get OT when traveling for work. (At least my engineer husband does, for every hour he is away and on the clock). If its not worth it to you, then you should probably just bring your snowflake with you.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:If you think your nanny isn't on duty and working while she and your children are asleep. And you don't intend to pay her for those hours. She should get to go home for those 8hrs, and leave your young children all alone in the house during the night.
This. It may be "legal", for what reasons, idk, but if your nanny is stupid enough to agree to not being paid while expected to be at work (ie. notin her own bed, not able to do as she please, and still responsible for your kid) then she is an idiot and I'd wonder why you would hire an idiot to care for your child.
I don't think most employers or nannies really would look at it as "I am not being paid for the sleeping hours." Both sides look at the entire amount being paid for the week and decide whether it's worth it to them (in the employer's case - can I pay this and is it worth not keeping my child with me for that week?; in the nanny's case - is this amount worth giving up a week straight of my time?).
As an example, if a nanny's rate was $15/hour - the parents could offer a minimum of $2,220 for a 7-day week of full-time childcare. That's because each "day" counts as 16 hours, so 112 hours of work for the week, with 72 hours of that being overtime. Obviously, assuming the kids are actually sleeping for at least 8 hours a night.
If parents weren't able to deduct sleeping hours, then the minimum legally allowed for a rate of $15/hour would be $3,480 for the week.
I imagine most nanny's wouldn't turn down an occasional offer of over $2,000 for a week of care even if they technically aren't being paid for the nights.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:If you think your nanny isn't on duty and working while she and your children are asleep. And you don't intend to pay her for those hours. She should get to go home for those 8hrs, and leave your young children all alone in the house during the night.
This. It may be "legal", for what reasons, idk, but if your nanny is stupid enough to agree to not being paid while expected to be at work (ie. notin her own bed, not able to do as she please, and still responsible for your kid) then she is an idiot and I'd wonder why you would hire an idiot to care for your child.
Anonymous wrote:If you think your nanny isn't on duty and working while she and your children are asleep. And you don't intend to pay her for those hours. She should get to go home for those 8hrs, and leave your young children all alone in the house during the night.
Anonymous wrote:Trying to use these discussion boards to figure the most fair and LEGAL way to pay nanny. Hiring a 24hr nanny 5 days a week for the next 2 months. I have a 2 & 5 year old. I understand because she is NOT a live-in (she is technically working 24hrs a day/ goes home on her days off) I have to pay her for every hour worked. What I'm confused about is that some on this board say they pay 1/2 the nannies hourly rate or a straight night wage ($50-100). Is reducing the rate technically legal? If she is working 120hrs a week, shouldn't I pay her regular rate for 40hrs, then OT rate for 80hrs? My children sleep well during the night, and nanny probably will have time to sleep- but at the same she will be on duty and working. My husband and I will be out of the house. And children may wake up for many reasons.
I am trying to understand the conflicting information I'm reading on these boards. I know nannies are exempt employees and have to paid hourly for all hours worked. And they get time and a half for hours over 40. But I have also read that legally you don't have to pay 8hrs of sleeping hours in a 24hr period.
Then why would a nanny agree to do a job and work tons of extra overtime hours and either not get OT, but actually get half rate or nothing at all for that time worked?
Again my question is, what is the legal way to pay a 24hr nanny?
Of course I would like the least costliest way, but I also want to be fair. I need the services of a nanny 24hrs a day. And I intend to pay for all services rendered.
Option A: 40 Regular Rate, 80 OT Rate
Or
Option B: 40 Regular Rate, 40 OT Rate (if I legally don't have to pay for 8hrs in a 24hr period).
I guess I could also "legally" make the regular rate very low, so I can pay the 80hrs OT rate. This is instead of cutting the overnight hours rate in half.
But another question would be why a nanny would except these positions in the first place??? Work double the hours, and get half the pay. Why is widely accepted that you can buy a nannies time in bulk and save big? It would be odd in any other position to pay different rates at different times of day. An hour worked, is an hour worked.
. If I were a candidate for your job and you said I might not have time to sleep some nights, I would be likely to question you in depth about why you said that, and what sort of night time issues you deal with regularly.time to sleep
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:What are you and your husband doing for five months that you'll be gone all night? When do you expect the nanny to sleep if you expect her to work day and night?
At night, when the kids do.