Anonymous wrote:We also keep our nanny and pay her full time. She's works full time in the summer for us - and all school holidays/ teacher days/ half days and if our daughter is home from school with a cold, she's available. She will pick up, organize, run errands and is invaluable. Plus she's been with us for 5 years.
Anonymous wrote:So op you can see that I was right when I mentioned paying $800 a week to get a reliable person.
You don't want an au pair living with you.
College students aren't reliable at all ( I am one as well so know what I am talking about trust me).
No serious nanny will work from 3:30-6:30 and survive on for long.
Your children have different activities so can't band with others to stay in one place.
Other people are overpaying for this.
So now that you have all the info, good luck.
Anonymous wrote:If it takes $20-25/hr to get a reliable person for 20 hrs/week worth of work, then you're already in the AP weekly cost zone, so might as well get some one who really is available during those core hours and will easily scale up hours in the summer.
As a college student who worked most semesters, I would not have been a reliable sitter because my studies came first and I really blacked out my schedule for finals and midterms.
doodlebug wrote: Seriously, team up with a couple other families with school aged kids, each of you pays $40-50 a day or whatever, and the nanny gets $150-200 a day and can live on that with those short hours. Will she be able to Take Billy to soccer, Sally to girl scouts, Timmy to lego club, Tara to math tutoriing etc? No. But if your kids lead normal lives with one activity a week at the most, then you can manage carpools for that one kid on one day while the after school nanny looks after the other four or five kids at someone's home. They can be working on some homework, having a snack, having some down time etc so they're more refreshed when the parents get home.