Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I'd probably hire you for close to $15/hour. It wouldn't bother me that the care is at your house or that your other kids are around. If it turns out that my child's development is at the determent of your family set up, I'd reconsider. But, I'd give it a chance.
This is coming from a mom of an 18 month old currently at a daycare center.
Out of curiosity, what about this situation would be attractive to you?
Does your child's day care center close two weeks out of the year that you still pay for (since it's standard to give a nanny two weeks paid vacation?). What about when the teacher gets sick, do you need to scramble for back up care or does the center handle that?
How much is the tuition at the daycare center? At $15/hr, OP would be getting $600 for a 40 hour work week. Plus overtime at time and a half--so even just 45 hours would be $712/week. As her employer, you'd also be responsible for withholding taxes and paying "nanny taxes" (social security, Medicare, etc.). This could easily add up to nearly $800/week. And you are still the one getting your child out of the house each day, the extra stop before and after work, etc.
My child's daycare closed two weeks a year that we still had to pay for. One over Christmas, and one at the end of the summer. And while the daycare didn't close due to sickness, I was never allowed to bring in my child when he was sick, which was all.the.time. And to be in a nice daycare where they didn't leave the kids in swings and bouncy seats all day and had a dark room for naps was $1500/mo. And this was in Ohio. I can't imagine what it is in DC.
Daycares in DC do not close for weeks at a time. That is the point of them!
+1
I've never heard of big center day cares closing for a week. I've heard of home day cares doing that--but usually at a home day care you are only paying $250-300/week, or even less. OP's desired salary would be more in the $800/week or more
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I'd probably hire you for close to $15/hour. It wouldn't bother me that the care is at your house or that your other kids are around. If it turns out that my child's development is at the determent of your family set up, I'd reconsider. But, I'd give it a chance.
This is coming from a mom of an 18 month old currently at a daycare center.
Out of curiosity, what about this situation would be attractive to you?
Does your child's day care center close two weeks out of the year that you still pay for (since it's standard to give a nanny two weeks paid vacation?). What about when the teacher gets sick, do you need to scramble for back up care or does the center handle that?
How much is the tuition at the daycare center? At $15/hr, OP would be getting $600 for a 40 hour work week. Plus overtime at time and a half--so even just 45 hours would be $712/week. As her employer, you'd also be responsible for withholding taxes and paying "nanny taxes" (social security, Medicare, etc.). This could easily add up to nearly $800/week. And you are still the one getting your child out of the house each day, the extra stop before and after work, etc.
My child's daycare closed two weeks a year that we still had to pay for. One over Christmas, and one at the end of the summer. And while the daycare didn't close due to sickness, I was never allowed to bring in my child when he was sick, which was all.the.time. And to be in a nice daycare where they didn't leave the kids in swings and bouncy seats all day and had a dark room for naps was $1500/mo. And this was in Ohio. I can't imagine what it is in DC.
Daycares in DC do not close for weeks at a time. That is the point of them!
+1
I've never heard of big center day cares closing for a week. I've heard of home day cares doing that--but usually at a home day care you are only paying $250-300/week, or even less. OP's desired salary would be more in the $800/week or more
Anonymous wrote:I still can't believe OP is leaving law to be a $10-$15/hr nanny. Unfathomable.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I'd probably hire you for close to $15/hour. It wouldn't bother me that the care is at your house or that your other kids are around. If it turns out that my child's development is at the determent of your family set up, I'd reconsider. But, I'd give it a chance.
This is coming from a mom of an 18 month old currently at a daycare center.
Out of curiosity, what about this situation would be attractive to you?
Does your child's day care center close two weeks out of the year that you still pay for (since it's standard to give a nanny two weeks paid vacation?). What about when the teacher gets sick, do you need to scramble for back up care or does the center handle that?
How much is the tuition at the daycare center? At $15/hr, OP would be getting $600 for a 40 hour work week. Plus overtime at time and a half--so even just 45 hours would be $712/week. As her employer, you'd also be responsible for withholding taxes and paying "nanny taxes" (social security, Medicare, etc.). This could easily add up to nearly $800/week. And you are still the one getting your child out of the house each day, the extra stop before and after work, etc.
My child's daycare closed two weeks a year that we still had to pay for. One over Christmas, and one at the end of the summer. And while the daycare didn't close due to sickness, I was never allowed to bring in my child when he was sick, which was all.the.time. And to be in a nice daycare where they didn't leave the kids in swings and bouncy seats all day and had a dark room for naps was $1500/mo. And this was in Ohio. I can't imagine what it is in DC.
Daycares in DC do not close for weeks at a time. That is the point of them!
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I'd probably hire you for close to $15/hour. It wouldn't bother me that the care is at your house or that your other kids are around. If it turns out that my child's development is at the determent of your family set up, I'd reconsider. But, I'd give it a chance.
This is coming from a mom of an 18 month old currently at a daycare center.
Out of curiosity, what about this situation would be attractive to you?
Does your child's day care center close two weeks out of the year that you still pay for (since it's standard to give a nanny two weeks paid vacation?). What about when the teacher gets sick, do you need to scramble for back up care or does the center handle that?
How much is the tuition at the daycare center? At $15/hr, OP would be getting $600 for a 40 hour work week. Plus overtime at time and a half--so even just 45 hours would be $712/week. As her employer, you'd also be responsible for withholding taxes and paying "nanny taxes" (social security, Medicare, etc.). This could easily add up to nearly $800/week. And you are still the one getting your child out of the house each day, the extra stop before and after work, etc.
My child's daycare closed two weeks a year that we still had to pay for. One over Christmas, and one at the end of the summer. And while the daycare didn't close due to sickness, I was never allowed to bring in my child when he was sick, which was all.the.time. And to be in a nice daycare where they didn't leave the kids in swings and bouncy seats all day and had a dark room for naps was $1500/mo. And this was in Ohio. I can't imagine what it is in DC.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I'd probably hire you for close to $15/hour. It wouldn't bother me that the care is at your house or that your other kids are around. If it turns out that my child's development is at the determent of your family set up, I'd reconsider. But, I'd give it a chance.
This is coming from a mom of an 18 month old currently at a daycare center.
Out of curiosity, what about this situation would be attractive to you?
Does your child's day care center close two weeks out of the year that you still pay for (since it's standard to give a nanny two weeks paid vacation?). What about when the teacher gets sick, do you need to scramble for back up care or does the center handle that?
How much is the tuition at the daycare center? At $15/hr, OP would be getting $600 for a 40 hour work week. Plus overtime at time and a half--so even just 45 hours would be $712/week. As her employer, you'd also be responsible for withholding taxes and paying "nanny taxes" (social security, Medicare, etc.). This could easily add up to nearly $800/week. And you are still the one getting your child out of the house each day, the extra stop before and after work, etc.
Anonymous wrote:I definitely would NOT do this if it's for 200-300/week. I was thinking closer to $15/hour ($3000/mo for full time). That would be enough extra cash to continue finish paying down my student loans and have some breathing room in our budget.
I can look into the adjunct thing. I really don't want to do legal work on the side.
My ideal would be to find someone who has an older child who goes to my DD's school and a baby who needs care, so that they'd be on the same schedule as us and live/commute to our area.