Anonymous wrote:Several friends of mine said that I am overpaying my nanny for her level of experience. What do you think?
My nanny watches my two year old 40 hours per week, 4 days a week and we pay her $22.00/hr. She cleans up after my child (laundry, cleans room, organizes play area, rinses child's dishes) and takes my child to a class 3x per week. No cooking because she says she does not know how to cook, so I make all the meals and she reheats it. English is not her first language and she would speak to my child in her native language which I asked her to stop because we are already a bilingual family. She also gets 10 days PTO and 4 days sick leave. She has about 10 years experience.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I get $26/hr for one child.
This meaningless without a listing of your duties, skills and experience.
Anonymous wrote:I get $26/hr for one child.
Anonymous wrote:No. You are not overpaying your children's nanny. My daughter's nanny has a college degree and preschool teaching experience as well as over ten years as a nanny and we pay her $27 an hour plus overtime.
Anonymous wrote:yAnonymous wrote:Several friends of mine said that I am overpaying my nanny for her level of experience. What do you think?
My nanny watches my two year old 40 hours per week, 4 days a week and we pay her $22.00/hr. She cleans up after my child (laundry, cleans room, organizes play area, rinses child's dishes) and takes my child to a class 3x per week. No cooking because she says she does not know how to cook, so I make all the meals and she reheats it. English is not her first language and she would speak to my child in her native language which I asked her to stop because we are already a bilingual family. She also gets 10 days PTO and 4 days sick leave. She has about 10 years experience.
Depend,if you pays this after taxes,yes,but if ou pays before taxes you are ver low,think about...
Happy New year!!
yAnonymous wrote:Several friends of mine said that I am overpaying my nanny for her level of experience. What do you think?
My nanny watches my two year old 40 hours per week, 4 days a week and we pay her $22.00/hr. She cleans up after my child (laundry, cleans room, organizes play area, rinses child's dishes) and takes my child to a class 3x per week. No cooking because she says she does not know how to cook, so I make all the meals and she reheats it. English is not her first language and she would speak to my child in her native language which I asked her to stop because we are already a bilingual family. She also gets 10 days PTO and 4 days sick leave. She has about 10 years experience.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:For reference I make $25/hr and don't do any "chores" (no cleaning, no folding clothes, no making beds, etc) but I am white and American. So I guess it just depends on what you value.
In my area you'd be called "unemployed."
Anonymous wrote:Yes, by about $7 per hour. Market is $15 for one child, and lots of people pay less.
Anonymous wrote:I also disagree that cooking should be dumped on a nanny to do. I am ok with microwave/oven heating of food but do not want to cook in the family's home simply because I could get burned, cause a fire or use an ingredient that can cause an allergic reaction in a child. Don't get me wrong I am good cook and careful person but just don't want to risk it. NF should provide ready to heat meals period.
Anonymous wrote:For reference I make $25/hr and don't do any "chores" (no cleaning, no folding clothes, no making beds, etc) but I am white and American. So I guess it just depends on what you value.