Anonymous wrote:I'd have happily worked for $18/hr gross in college. All the other jobs that fit my hours were offering significantly less than that...
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:This thread is equating a college after school babysitter with a professional nanny. We paid our professional nanny who worked 50 hours a week a guaranteed salary, vacation, sick days etc. a much higher wage than we pay our after school sitters who worked 15 or so hours a week. You are looking in two completely different pools of applicants. We did take taxes out of both salaries. We do not for a Saturday night sitters because we never hit the threshold.
This is a high school or college student, I presume, based on OP's original post. $18 would be low for a PT professional nanny, but very reasonable for a student, in most urban areas.
Anonymous wrote:This thread is equating a college after school babysitter with a professional nanny. We paid our professional nanny who worked 50 hours a week a guaranteed salary, vacation, sick days etc. a much higher wage than we pay our after school sitters who worked 15 or so hours a week. You are looking in two completely different pools of applicants. We did take taxes out of both salaries. We do not for a Saturday night sitters because we never hit the threshold.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Why would you want to tax your babysitters income? That's just dumb.
Because it's against the law not to if you pay your sitter more than $1900 over the course of the year, and OP may have a government job that requires that he/she abide by the law (or may just want to do follow the law, regardless).
That's really terrific and appreciated by most professional nannies, but you have to offer a fair wage in the first place.
OP is offering $18 an hour, which is very fair in my area for afterschool care of school-aged children. YMMV if you live elsewhere.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Why would you want to tax your babysitters income? That's just dumb.
Because it's against the law not to if you pay your sitter more than $1900 over the course of the year, and OP may have a government job that requires that he/she abide by the law (or may just want to do follow the law, regardless).
That's really terrific and appreciated by most professional nannies, but you have to offer a fair wage in the first place.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Why would you want to tax your babysitters income? That's just dumb.
Because it's against the law not to if you pay your sitter more than $1900 over the course of the year, and OP may have a government job that requires that he/she abide by the law (or may just want to do follow the law, regardless).
Anonymous wrote:Why would you want to tax your babysitters income? That's just dumb.
Anonymous wrote:I wouldn't work so few hours unless it was cash. Just being honest.
I love how MBs get all the vitriol from the resident nanny crusaders for not paying legally, yet when you get someone who insists on paying legally, she's being subjected to a weird requirement that it has to be all cash, or that she has to offer enough hours to make it worth the nanny's while to pay taxes. Hypocrisy unleashed.
So true. The nannies here are awful.