Anonymous wrote:lol at $15 being outdated. Folks, plenty of high quality sitters out there even on a part time basis are good with $15.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:lol at $15 being outdated. Folks, plenty of high quality sitters out there even on a part time basis are good with $15.
I found a nanny in DC for 15.00.
Anonymous wrote:lol at $15 being outdated. Folks, plenty of high quality sitters out there even on a part time basis are good with $15.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Just for kicks, would anyone care to sketch a hypothetical budget for a DC area live-out nanny earning $15 per hour? Guesstimate 30% for taxes, rent, utilities, student loans, car loans, food, clothing, etc., etc.
I am wondering how they do it.
We got a nanny that performed the following for 15.00 in DC
Here is what she did more or less
- she is responsible for meals (or bottles), cleaning up after meals, cooking food for them, etc...
- she does the kids' laundry, bedding, maintains orderliness of play areas, etc...
- she helps me organize their clothes/buy new/rotate out old, etc...
- she drives my kids all over the place - lessons, activities, preschool, library, park....
- she has responsibility for my kids in and outside the home
- she is expected to maintain the household schedule (naps, bottles, bedtimes if appropriate), and disciplinary approach
- she is a partner w/ us in establishing schedules and systems and evolving as the kids grow
- she has, on occasion, stayed overnight w/ the kids and been the responsible party while we travelled out of town
- she is the designated person to contact in an emergency if a parent is unavailable and a child needs to be picked up from school
Anonymous wrote:Just for kicks, would anyone care to sketch a hypothetical budget for a DC area live-out nanny earning $15 per hour? Guesstimate 30% for taxes, rent, utilities, student loans, car loans, food, clothing, etc., etc.
I am wondering how they do it.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Just for kicks, would anyone care to sketch a hypothetical budget for a DC area live-out nanny earning $15 per hour? Guesstimate 30% for taxes, rent, utilities, student loans, car loans, food, clothing, etc., etc.
I am wondering how they do it.
This is from five years ago. And some of you people want to offer $16/hr. today? You've lost your marbles.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I am not a nanny but I do not understand why anyone wouId take care of a child for less than $30.00 an hour. Some of you are taking care of two or three for less than $20/hr. Crazy.
Because bills need paying, lady.
What's your general budget if you can pay the bills on $15/hr? Or do you have to work an insane number of hours just to make ends meet?
I live in a metropolitan area outside of the greater DC area and here, most nannies are paid off the books. So a FT nanny @ 45 hours/week makes $35K after tax. I know this does not account for 5 hours @ OT pay, but an off books nanny typically doesn't get OT. Unlimited fare card for public transportation is generally included so no commuting costs. Nannies live outside the city center so rent is cheaper, let's say if living alone, rent is $1K monthly, so disposable income of about $2K a month. A single nanny can definitely live on that and if frugal, save a little every month. Not so for a nanny who is the sole wage earner. The nannies I have come across typically are either single young women or in a two (or more) earner household.
Anonymous wrote:Just for kicks, would anyone care to sketch a hypothetical budget for a DC area live-out nanny earning $15 per hour? Guesstimate 30% for taxes, rent, utilities, student loans, car loans, food, clothing, etc., etc.
I am wondering how they do it.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:So many parents have been led to believe they can get a good nanny for cheap. Most of them end up with broken-English sitters who need detailed directions on a daily basis.
It's all so sad for the children. Many of them end up with special needs.
Do you have any evidence to support that last claim?
Anonymous wrote:So many parents have been led to believe they can get a good nanny for cheap. Most of them end up with broken-English sitters who need detailed directions on a daily basis.
It's all so sad for the children. Many of them end up with special needs.
Anonymous wrote:As $15/hr becomes the new minimum wage then the $15/hr nanny is a thing if the past. Wal-,Mart is now giving Wage of $11/hr. A $15/hr nanny would be better off working there.