never heard of no coffee in any office, even our 12 person startup office has a Keurig and Nespresso machine with stocked pods
TriAg2010 said:AgsMyDude said:Cyp0111 said:
Work in satellite office of a huge company. No coffee
Yikes, crazy. Did they before covid?
I'm not sure I could sign on to a company that doesn't provide one of the cheapest amenities possible.
Our factory (profit center) didn't have free coffee, but every single other office (cost center) did.
My company tried that for a few weeks. They quickly reversed it when employees protested by refusing to use the central trash cans and instead just left trash everywhere. That's an easy one to overcome.$30,000 Millionaire said:
If your company ever hires AT Kearney to look at expenses, you can plan on a terrible environment.
No clocks on walls - those batteries cost money
No coffee and tea, but there may be a Starbucks that pays the company to use their space and that's your amenity (hardly)
Open office concept with no assigned desks to have less space
HVAC shuts off at 6pm
No printers or restricted access printers
Garbage bins in hallways or a central area
No office supplies - you'll have to bring your own
that's funny.. I have a trash can at my desk, and I don't like to use it lol.YouBet said:My company tried that for a few weeks. They quickly reversed it when employees protested by refusing to use the central trash cans and instead just left trash everywhere. That's an easy one to overcome.$30,000 Millionaire said:
If your company ever hires AT Kearney to look at expenses, you can plan on a terrible environment.
No clocks on walls - those batteries cost money
No coffee and tea, but there may be a Starbucks that pays the company to use their space and that's your amenity (hardly)
Open office concept with no assigned desks to have less space
HVAC shuts off at 6pm
No printers or restricted access printers
Garbage bins in hallways or a central area
No office supplies - you'll have to bring your own
Diggity said:
all of you people's companies suck
I also worked out of a satellite office of a huge company. They shut down the office and converted all of us to remote workers.Cyp0111 said:
Work in satellite office of a huge company. No coffee
lck90 said:
People on TexAgs work? I thought we were all millionaires.
Cynic said:
I have to go into the office two days a week. The complainers about this policy drive me nuts. They say other companies will steal the talent because they do full remote.
I'm waiting for them to leave but they don't.
YouBet said:
If I worked somewhere where I had an office to go into and my commute wasn't completely atrocious I would probably go in voluntarily 4-5 days per week simply because it's going to automatically give me a leg up on everyone else...in most cases.
I would then laugh at all the remote people pissing and moaning about me getting promoted and they didn't. You should have been there.
Ogre09 said:
Wait, we're supposed to be putting $70k in our brokerage account? Annually?
ea1060 said:YouBet said:
If I worked somewhere where I had an office to go into and my commute wasn't completely atrocious I would probably go in voluntarily 4-5 days per week simply because it's going to automatically give me a leg up on everyone else...in most cases.
I would then laugh at all the remote people pissing and moaning about me getting promoted and they didn't. You should have been there.
If the remote person better than the office person, I would bet money they would still be promoted over the office employee.
cjsag94 said:
I think this thread is an interesting read.
Presumably the majority of us on this forum are college educated and well above average wage earners, yet much of the discussion feels like it's suggesting we are average or normal. $1250/mo daycare is a high end level of care... Some shop or lady down the block to watch your kid didn't cost that.
Cyp0111 said:
Gas , plus lunch and coffee ets. It's prob closer to $600-800 mth
AgsMyDude said:cjsag94 said:
I think this thread is an interesting read.
Presumably the majority of us on this forum are college educated and well above average wage earners, yet much of the discussion feels like it's suggesting we are average or normal. $1250/mo daycare is a high end level of care... Some shop or lady down the block to watch your kid didn't cost that.
I'm curious. Do you currently have kids in daycare?
We have 2 and recently shopped prices around with 6 different places. Some were ladies that do them at their house all the way to full-on "pre-schools"
The CHEAPEAST of the 6 for a child under 18 months was $1,100 a month. And that was "some lady down the block" who watches them downstairs and lives her life upstairs. Absolutely nowhere near "high-end level of care".
This in the 'burbs too.
If you have 2 kids, you get a $40-a-month reduction for "bundling"
Daycare is outrageously expensive these days.
These days?AgsMyDude said:cjsag94 said:
I think this thread is an interesting read.
Presumably the majority of us on this forum are college educated and well above average wage earners, yet much of the discussion feels like it's suggesting we are average or normal. $1250/mo daycare is a high end level of care... Some shop or lady down the block to watch your kid didn't cost that.
I'm curious. Do you currently have kids in daycare?
We have 2 and recently shopped prices around with 6 different places. Some were ladies that do them at their house all the way to full-on "pre-schools"
The CHEAPEAST of the 6 for a child under 18 months was $1,100 a month. And that was "some lady down the block" who watches them downstairs and lives her life upstairs. Absolutely nowhere near "high-end level of care".
This in the 'burbs too.
If you have 2 kids, you get a $40-a-month reduction for "bundling"
Daycare is outrageously expensive these days.
cjsag94 said:AgsMyDude said:cjsag94 said:
I think this thread is an interesting read.
Presumably the majority of us on this forum are college educated and well above average wage earners, yet much of the discussion feels like it's suggesting we are average or normal. $1250/mo daycare is a high end level of care... Some shop or lady down the block to watch your kid didn't cost that.
I'm curious. Do you currently have kids in daycare?
We have 2 and recently shopped prices around with 6 different places. Some were ladies that do them at their house all the way to full-on "pre-schools"
The CHEAPEAST of the 6 for a child under 18 months was $1,100 a month. And that was "some lady down the block" who watches them downstairs and lives her life upstairs. Absolutely nowhere near "high-end level of care".
This in the 'burbs too.
If you have 2 kids, you get a $40-a-month reduction for "bundling"
Daycare is outrageously expensive these days.
I do not, and I don't doubt your numbers. My point, though, is that your case starts with living in the burbs and all that it takes to do that. Poor/low income people don't pay that... They use family and community resources out of necessity. Spending $1000/mo on child care is a luxury... What I do have is teenage daughters, and be warned that you may stop paying for daycare, but those expenses and more have a way of shifting to something else throughout the years.
Three are all luxury expenditures we incur because we can.. loving in the burbs around others like us make us feel it is normal.
Interesting chart on low income childcare sources here:
https://www.aei.org/poverty-studies/how-do-low-income-families-pay-for-child-care/
62strat said:These days?AgsMyDude said:cjsag94 said:
I think this thread is an interesting read.
Presumably the majority of us on this forum are college educated and well above average wage earners, yet much of the discussion feels like it's suggesting we are average or normal. $1250/mo daycare is a high end level of care... Some shop or lady down the block to watch your kid didn't cost that.
I'm curious. Do you currently have kids in daycare?
We have 2 and recently shopped prices around with 6 different places. Some were ladies that do them at their house all the way to full-on "pre-schools"
The CHEAPEAST of the 6 for a child under 18 months was $1,100 a month. And that was "some lady down the block" who watches them downstairs and lives her life upstairs. Absolutely nowhere near "high-end level of care".
This in the 'burbs too.
If you have 2 kids, you get a $40-a-month reduction for "bundling"
Daycare is outrageously expensive these days.
I paid more than more $1250 a month for my first kid almost a decade ago. First child started Jan 2015 and was $315 a week.
It peaked at $630/wk for the year 2016 for two kids.
Luckily my wife netted more than this after paying the family health premiums and into her pension, so she kept working.
It is a luxury for those that can afford it..AgsMyDude said:cjsag94 said:AgsMyDude said:cjsag94 said:
I think this thread is an interesting read.
Presumably the majority of us on this forum are college educated and well above average wage earners, yet much of the discussion feels like it's suggesting we are average or normal. $1250/mo daycare is a high end level of care... Some shop or lady down the block to watch your kid didn't cost that.
I'm curious. Do you currently have kids in daycare?
We have 2 and recently shopped prices around with 6 different places. Some were ladies that do them at their house all the way to full-on "pre-schools"
The CHEAPEAST of the 6 for a child under 18 months was $1,100 a month. And that was "some lady down the block" who watches them downstairs and lives her life upstairs. Absolutely nowhere near "high-end level of care".
This in the 'burbs too.
If you have 2 kids, you get a $40-a-month reduction for "bundling"
Daycare is outrageously expensive these days.
I do not, and I don't doubt your numbers. My point, though, is that your case starts with living in the burbs and all that it takes to do that. Poor/low income people don't pay that... They use family and community resources out of necessity. Spending $1000/mo on child care is a luxury... What I do have is teenage daughters, and be warned that you may stop paying for daycare, but those expenses and more have a way of shifting to something else throughout the years.
Three are all luxury expenditures we incur because we can.. loving in the burbs around others like us make us feel it is normal.
Interesting chart on low income childcare sources here:
https://www.aei.org/poverty-studies/how-do-low-income-families-pay-for-child-care/
Daycare is not a luxury expenditure if both parents need to work. It is a necessity. What a wild take.
Long waiting lists at many tho.coastalAg said:
This has been pointed out on other threads, but Church run day cares/pre-schools are the value play in the day care market.
I pay $600/month for full time care for my kid.
Fair. Just pointing out there may be other options to the $1000+ a month standalone facilities.techno-ag said:Long waiting lists at many tho.coastalAg said:
This has been pointed out on other threads, but Church run day cares/pre-schools are the value play in the day care market.
I pay $600/month for full time care for my kid.
Is $600/month church care educational too? Or just providing a safe and fun place for your kid?coastalAg said:Fair. Just pointing out there may be other options to the $1000+ a month standalone facilities.techno-ag said:Long waiting lists at many tho.coastalAg said:
This has been pointed out on other threads, but Church run day cares/pre-schools are the value play in the day care market.
I pay $600/month for full time care for my kid.
62strat said:It is a luxury for those that can afford it..AgsMyDude said:cjsag94 said:AgsMyDude said:cjsag94 said:
I think this thread is an interesting read.
Presumably the majority of us on this forum are college educated and well above average wage earners, yet much of the discussion feels like it's suggesting we are average or normal. $1250/mo daycare is a high end level of care... Some shop or lady down the block to watch your kid didn't cost that.
I'm curious. Do you currently have kids in daycare?
We have 2 and recently shopped prices around with 6 different places. Some were ladies that do them at their house all the way to full-on "pre-schools"
The CHEAPEAST of the 6 for a child under 18 months was $1,100 a month. And that was "some lady down the block" who watches them downstairs and lives her life upstairs. Absolutely nowhere near "high-end level of care".
This in the 'burbs too.
If you have 2 kids, you get a $40-a-month reduction for "bundling"
Daycare is outrageously expensive these days.
I do not, and I don't doubt your numbers. My point, though, is that your case starts with living in the burbs and all that it takes to do that. Poor/low income people don't pay that... They use family and community resources out of necessity. Spending $1000/mo on child care is a luxury... What I do have is teenage daughters, and be warned that you may stop paying for daycare, but those expenses and more have a way of shifting to something else throughout the years.
Three are all luxury expenditures we incur because we can.. loving in the burbs around others like us make us feel it is normal.
Interesting chart on low income childcare sources here:
https://www.aei.org/poverty-studies/how-do-low-income-families-pay-for-child-care/
Daycare is not a luxury expenditure if both parents need to work. It is a necessity. What a wild take.
But if mom or dad don't make enough to cover daycare, then one quits and raise the kids until grade school. Another job can be had at that time. It is not necessary for both parents to continue working and be in the hole for daycare. Why would you??? You have more revenue if one quits.
Now a couple both working that are barely making enough to make ends meet.. that is going to be a problem when a kid comes and either the added expense of daycare, or loss of a job comes around.
But no one forced you to have a baby either.
They have education and religious curriculum that is followed. Their days are very structured with a good balance of play mixed in.62strat said:Is $600/month church care educational too? Or just providing a safe and fun place for your kid?coastalAg said:Fair. Just pointing out there may be other options to the $1000+ a month standalone facilities.techno-ag said:Long waiting lists at many tho.coastalAg said:
This has been pointed out on other threads, but Church run day cares/pre-schools are the value play in the day care market.
I pay $600/month for full time care for my kid.
Admiral Adama said:
I pay for childcare for two littles that attend a middle tier Pre-K and am reading y'all's figures for costs. *Cries in Californian*