Entries categorized as ‘childcare’
Kate’s sister is friend’s with Stephanie. Kate and Stephanie live less than a mile away from eachother. Kate and Stephanie connected on momnod and Stephanie is going to babysit for Kate next week . An amazing 24 year-old gets to watch the most darling baby in the world and aparticular new mom can leave her daughter with a woman she really really trusts.
Yey! 
Categories: babysitting · childcare
Tagged: cupid
This site might actually help a newbie babysitter or mom.
“Here’s step 1: Check your calendar to make sure you are available when asked to babysit. This will help avoid the frustration of a last minute change of plans due to poor planning. Find out what time you will be needed, night or day, and again check to make sure you are available. If not, you can ask the person if you can babysit another time, or babysit another child. All of us can’t babysit at the right time, whether you go to school, whether working, whether busy or you have a kid to take care of yourself.”
Categories: babysitting · childcare
Sittercity has a calculator which is great except they don’t explain their methodology. They ask for a zip code, number of kids and years of experience belonging to the sitter.

Let’s assume you’ve got 2+ kids and this person has been on and off babysitting since they were 12. Here’s what I think is the market rate for good help by age and driver’s license (note the bump).
Babsyitter rates by AGE
11-13 $7.50/hr
13-16 $8.50/hr
16-18 $10/hr
18-22 $12.50
22+ = $13+
That’s assuming your in an area with a slightly higher cost of living like San Francisco, New York, Los Angeles etc.
Categories: babysitting · childcare · hourly rates · money
Tagged: babysitters, rates, sittercity
This MSN article discusses the insane cost of childcare in the US today. Come on, it’s basically paying rent on your kids until they go to high school and 4 years later you really get to pay. (Especially with the financial aid you’ll be enjoying as a dual-income home)
“With child care for infants running as high as $14,650 a year and care for a 4-year-old in a licensed center as high as $10,920, child-care costs have outpaced what the average family spends on food, according to the National Association of Child Care Resources and Referral Agencies.”
-The child-care crisis msn.com
When both parents work, families need someone to mind the kids. But with costs as high as $14,650 a year, day care can swallow most of one parent’s wages.
Categories: career · childcare · money · stats
Tagged: MSN article
A study of child care in four states found “child care at most centers in the U.S. is poor to mediocre,” with 12% providing care that could harm “children’s health, safety, and development.” – Source: momsrising (why don’t they site their source?)

Categories: childcare · stats
Tagged: childcare, stats