Anonymous wrote:Many nannies in my bethesda neighborhood are on a fixed weekly salary. As is ours for 6 years now.
It's not illegal at all. And if you said that to a potential employer you'd be exaggerating yourself right out the door.
What a disgusting thread! So this mb took another position and I'm assuming because it has financial benefits opposed to what she was doing before. YET wants to find a way to cheat someone that they expect to work 10 hours of overtime per week? Why? So that you can hold on to your salary increase while she gets nothing? Maybe you shouldn't have a nanny if this is how you are seeing the situation. Unreal
Calm down. She's trying to figure out how she can afford this.
OP - can you afford your current nanny for the 50 hours if you were paying $20/hr for all of those hours? If so, then that is a very sizeable increase in income for her (assuming she is not put off by a more full-time workload of course.) What you would do then is take the $1,000 weekly amount that you can afford, and back that into what that means for a base rate at 40 hours and 10 hours of overtime. $1000/week for 50 hours works out to a base hourly wage of $18.18 and an overtime rate of $27.27
I don't think that's an offensive offer to your existing nanny. It's almost a 10% reduction in hourly rate, but it's almost a 40% increase in income. She might not be interested of course, but I don't think there's any harm in talking with her about it.
If she's not interested then you have lots of room to look for someone new. The dollars you're talking about will give you a great deal of options in applicants.
Anonymous wrote:Many nannies in my bethesda neighborhood are on a fixed weekly salary. As is ours for 6 years now.
It's not illegal at all. And if you said that to a potential employer you'd be exaggerating yourself right out the door.
Anonymous wrote:Pay her salary and don't pay overtime. It's not a legal requirement. Look at any other professional job, 50-80 hour work weeks for a flat rate. That is the professional world that nannies so desperately want to be a part of.
Anonymous wrote:I have just accepted a new job that will move our nanny from 36 hours a week to 50 hours a week. I am very worried about being able to afford ten hours of overtime at $30 an hour. Our nanny is paid legally with a payroll service.
Is there anyway to legally get around overtime?