Wow, if you worked in child care you'd see that women who are putting their kids in full time child care don't pay as much as you are charging this woman, does she know she could get full time fully licensed child care for less?
Sorry, but you're already charging her a lot, I think you should give her the care for the same amount.
Here's a link to Oklahoma's scale of what they pay a child care provider for children of low income families. Since this is all the facility can charge a majority of the families that come to their facility since nearly everyone qualifies for at least a little bit of help they all charge pretty much these rates or at least close to them.
http://www.okdhs.org/NR/rdonlyres/2E81F###-###-####-487B-...
A 1 STAR is the bare minimum required to be able to watch children in your home. A 2 STAR requires at least 20 hours each year of continuing education, CPR/First Aid, classes in early childhood development, ethics, and other classes. They go to these classes on their own time and pay out of pocket for any fees. It's their career so they are responsible for their own credentials. A 3 STAR is a nationally certified child care facility, they have a nationally accredited curriculum, each staff person has a degree or is working on one, the owner/director has a minimum of a bachelors and is most likely working on their masters if they don't already have one. They also have national accreditation as a director/owner.
An enhanced area/county is one that has a higher ratio of urban/city towns. They get more per day because the cost of living is higher.
These fees include all meals, breakfast, morning snack, lunch, afternoon snack, and sometimes an evening snack, (we can't go for more than 3 hours without offering food to a child), craft projects, everything they need during the day. Infants parents to provide their formula and baby food.
Most kids in child care are there for at least 10 hours too, mom goes to work at 8 and has to be in her office and ready to work by 8am. So they drop the kids off at 7:15. Then she works all day and gets off at 5, or tries to leave within a few minutes after. She gets to her car and tries to fight traffic to get her kids. By the time she gets there it's 5:45. 5:15 was 10 hours so this day was 10 1/2 hours.
It's not uncommon for it to run into 11 hours. And they pay, if they're paying cash out of pocket, they would pay between $15.50 per day up to $27.75 for an infant and $11.25 up to $18.25 for a school age child.
These prices are for full time, over 10 hours per day, for child care. What you are charging for babysitting is more than double what this parent would pay for child care. That's why I think you might want to reconsider how much you're charging and for how much you might be paying someone for babysitting for you.
I know of several families that put in an add for babysitting and the kids that responded have various charges. The most ludicrous wanted $20 per hour for 1 child. They asked why they should pick her and she said "because I took some classes and like kids".....they said no thank you.
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Nanny's do a lot more than watch a child in their home for a few hours. They go to the child's home, they cook that child food, they clean the kitchen after they cook, they might do a load of laundry, clean the playroom, clean his room, a nanny provides total care for a child in his own home and do other duties as needed.
A nanny should get more because they also do things for the parents and other family members.
All I'm saying is that this mom could probably find fully licensed child care for less than she is already paying this mom. That should could also find that child care on the weekend and not pay more for it being a Saturday.
I think it's too high what she's charging this mom already. And to add more to it. A full time teacher in child care has anywhere from 4 infants up to 20 school aged children in her care at one time. They work for just above minimum wage. They go to school, get extra training, do hours and hours of prep work before they go in to teach their class. Child care workers are professional care givers.
Fully licensed child care centers charge less per day than $40 per child. This mom is charging $40 per day for pretty much part time care. This child's mom can find other care if she'd just look.
This mom posting this question needs to understand that if she raises her price for this child she is going to make it impossible for anyone to pay her, they can find care for nearly half as much. That's all.
If you mom's truly pay your babysitters that much per hour then how do you pay your bills, pay for anything. Normal people don't make $15 per hour. We make minimum wage or maybe a little bit more.