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Search resuls for: "Care.com"


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IAC said Monday it's exploring a spinoff of Angi , an online platform that connects consumers with a marketplace of home improvement service providers in their area, like electricians and landscapers. The company is considering a spinoff of Angi that would result in its stake being distributed to shareholders, IAC CEO Joey Levin wrote in a letter to shareholders that coincided with the company's third-quarter earnings release. IAC owns 85% of Angi, which also includes home services marketplaces Handy and HomeAdvisor. Media platform Dotdash Meredith and MGM Resorts "would comprise the core of IAC" in the event of an Angi spinoff, Levin said. IAC acquired Angi in 2017, and it's been weighing a spinoff of the business for several years.
Persons: Joey Levin, Handy, Meredith, Levin, Angi, it's, It's, Barry Diller, I'm Organizations: IAC, HomeAdvisor, MGM Resorts, Match, Expedia, Ticketmaster
To Barry Diller, a friend of Amazon founder Jeff Bezos, the decision for The Washington Post not to endorse a candidate in tomorrow's presidential election was "absolutely principled" — and poorly timed, he said Monday on CNBC's Squawk Box. "They made a blunder — it should've happened months before, and it didn't, and that's the issue with it," Diller said. Diller is chairperson of both online travel company Expedia and IAC , which owns media platforms and websites like Dotdash Meredith and Care.com. "I think it was absolutely principled," Diller said. "The mistake they made — and it was a mistake admitted by him — was timing."
Persons: Barry Diller, Jeff Bezos, Diller, Dotdash Meredith, Care.com, Diane von Furstenberg, Lauren Sanchez, Bezos, Organizations: Amazon, The Washington Post, IAC Locations: Bezos
Tim Walz said during the VP debate that help from family members should not be the solution to childcare. JD Vance previously suggested that grandparents help out more to solve the childcare crisis. Tim Walz took the debate stage in New York to discuss a range of topics, including healthcare, housing, and the economy. AdvertisementHis comments sparked criticism from grandparents and childcare workers who argued that relying on family members for childcare is not feasible. We should have a family care model that makes choice possible," he said.
Persons: Tim Walz, JD Vance, Vance, , Sen, Walz, " Walz, Charlie Kirk, Taylor Van Kirk, Renne Bock, " Bock Organizations: Service, Gov, Business Locations: New York
You can opt-out at any time by visiting our Preferences page or by clicking "unsubscribe" at the bottom of the email. download the appSign up to get the inside scoop on today’s biggest stories in markets, tech, and business — delivered daily. The website, which connects people with babysitters, senior care workers, or housesitters, used "inflated job numbers and baseless earnings claims" to deceive both customers and workers, the FTC said in a statement. AdvertisementTo communicate with a caregiver on Care, both job posters and job seekers must create an account on the website with an auto-renewed subscription, according to the release. AdvertisementCare said in the statement that the renewing subscriptions users have to buy are actually an annual "screening fee."
Persons: , Samuel Levine, Care.com, Care Organizations: Service, Federal Trade Commission, Business, of Consumer, Forbes, FTC, Care Locations: United States
It followed tens of thousands of complaints from Care.com customers, including many who thought they canceled memberships but were billed again. The FTC said Care.com enticed customers to buy auto-renewing memberships by overstating the number of jobs, or "gigs," on its platform and how much people could earn from them. It said Care.com knew or should have known a significant number of the jobs were unlikely to result in employment. About 2.9 million U.S. consumers bought Care.com auto-renewing memberships between January 2019 and March 2022. "Care.com used inflated job numbers and baseless earnings claims to lure caregivers onto its platform, and used deceptive design practices to trap consumers in subscriptions," FTC consumer protection chief Samuel Levine said.
Persons: Care.com, Samuel Levine Organizations: Federal Trade Commission, IAC Inc, FTC, Austin Locations: Care.com, Waltham , Massachusetts, Austin , Texas
Some business leaders and wealthy donors are hopeful that Harris will adopt more centrist policies as she outlines her agenda, especially by dialing back Biden-era antitrust crackdowns. “CEOs are wildly excited about Harris,” Jeffrey Sonnenfeld, founder and president of the Yale Chief Executive Leadership Institute, told CNN in a phone interview. Sonnenfeld pointed to confidence that Harris will protect the rule of law and hopes for recalibrated trade, regulatory and tax policies. Meanwhile, Harris, somewhat of an unknown commodity on business policy, hasn’t said much about where she stands. Another key sticking point is energy, where Trump has tried to blame the Biden-Harris administration for periods of high gas prices.
Persons: Kamala Harris, Harris, Biden, ” Jeffrey Sonnenfeld, Sonnenfeld, Lina Khan, Khan’s, hasn’t, , , Greg Valliere, Democratic megadonor Reid Hoffman, Khan, Hoffman, Barry Diller, Diller, It’s, ” Diller, , haven’t, PCCC, Adam Green, Harris –, ” Green, Lina Khan –, ” Sonnenfeld, “ It’s, Douglas Farrar, Donald Trump, Joe Biden, Trump, ” Trump, “ You’re, Lauren Hitt, didn’t Organizations: New, New York CNN, Biden, Big Tech, Democratic, Yale, Leadership, CNN, Federal Trade Commission, Progressives, AGF Investments, Business, Big Oil, Microsoft, FTC, , Activision, CNBC, IAC, Progressive, Khan, Public Citizen, AFL, NAACP, Harris Administration Locations: New York, North Carolina
Swanson has been working as a live-in nanny in the Hamptons since 2020. On July 1, the 33-year-old posted a 90-second clip on her account @meredithgswanson walking people through a day in her life as a nanny in the Hamptons. "I was stunned," says Swanson, who started vlogging about nannying in the Hamptons over a year ago. Every family she's worked with in the Hamptons has loaned her a car for the summer, which is how she commutes. Care.com puts the average rate for a live-in nanny in East Hampton at $26.33 an hour.
Persons: Swanson, Meredith Swanson, nannying, I've, she's, Summers Organizations: Hamptons, Broadway Locations: New York City, Manhattan, nannying, nannied, East Hampton
From a broken freezer of spoiled food to a withered vegetable garden, house sitters can prevent disaster from striking while you kick back and relax. The most trusted pet-sitting appRover Pet-sitting and Dog Walking Rover is a one-stop-shop for everything pet care. For pet sitters, Rover's ability to set your own rates after passing the background check and safety quiz is a major perk. The best for pet-sitting businesses near youPet Sitters International Pet Sitting Certification Rather than a service platform, Pet Sitters International is a search engine pet owners and certification source for aspirational sitters. For pet owners, the organization offers an online database of registered pet sitters.
Persons: that's, it's, Meowtel Organizations: Business, Rover
He and his wife felt it would be unsafe to raise their child there and decided to move to Japan. He finds Japan more affordable, safe, and is happy to be living near his wife's family — but he's scared of bullying. AdvertisementMy wife was already six months pregnant when we agreed she would leave the US and have our baby in Japan. I want him to learn to speak Japanese fluently and feel safe enough to enjoy his childhood to its fullest. As a professor myself and after a 20-year long career in education, I have read studies that note the lack of critical thinking taught in Japanese high schools.
Persons: Trevor D, Houchen, , We'd, — we're, she'd, we'd, we've, Care.com, I'm, I'd Organizations: Service, Georgia Technical College, Georgia Gwinnett College —, of Health, Ministry of Health, Labor, Welfare, Kaiser Family Foundation, Japan Times, New York City —, US Naval Locations: Atlanta, Japan, LA, Yokosuka —, Tokyo, Houkien, New York City, Yokosuka
In your 30s, your list of financial burdens is probably growing, including everything from paying for child care to saving up for a first home. Despite these challenges, Americans in their 30s managed to save the most money out of any age group in 2023, according to data from New York Life. Parents in the U.S. spend around 24% of their household income on child care each year, a recent report from Care.com found. "But child care, we have to pay for that once the baby's born. If you're in your 30s and want to save more this year, here are two strategies to help stash away more cash.
Persons: it's, Shaun Melby, Care.com, you've Organizations: New York, Melby Wealth, CNBC Locations: New, U.S
The organization advocates for company and government policy that supports working parents. All companies offered some form of childcare benefits — stipends, on-site care, or backup care. And, for each company, its annual net return for childcare benefits far outweighed the cost. But, when a company offers childcare benefits, retaining just 1% of eligible working parents could cover the price a company pays for those benefits, the study said. Childcare benefits boost employees' career prospects and earning potentialNot only do childcare benefits support a company's bottom line, but the study shows it improves the earning potential and career growth of individual employees.
Persons: , it's Organizations: Service, Business, Companies, Bank of America, UPS
The American Dream is under siege
  + stars: | 2024-03-02 | by ( Matt Egan | ) edition.cnn.com   time to read: +15 min
Parents of young children are making difficult choices to afford child care — or they’re opting to evade it by dropping out of the workforce altogether. Even as the inflation rate has cooled across the US economy, child care remains a sore spot for many families. The weekly price of day care for a toddler surged 9% in 2023, according to Care.com, a marketplace for child care. Of course, Allison is hardly alone in feeling like the American Dream has been more difficult — and expensive — to attain than imagined. “The American dream is being taken away from the younger generation by the housing affordability challenges,” said Lawrence Yun, chief economist at the National Association of Realtors.
Persons: Hana Husković, Price, Hana, Michelle, they'll, ” Hana, , It’s, they’ll, ’ Allison Powell, Liam Kelly, ” Allison, Allison Powell, Corinne ., , Allison, I’ll, homebuyers, Lotfi Karoui, Goldman Sachs, Lawrence Yun, Yun, Priscilla Almodovar, Fannie Mae, ” Almodovar, that’s, Almodovar, they’d, Homebuilding, Mark Zandi, Biden, ” Lael Brainard, Brainard, ” Brainard, , Rachael Gambino, Garrett Mazzeo, Rachael, Deborah Brunswick, John General, ” Rachael, won’t, they’ve, Organizations: New, New York CNN, Bureau of Labor Statistics, Wall, CNN, Federal, Intercontinental Exchange, ICE, Bloomberg, Getty, Rust Belt, National Association of Realtors, North, NAR, That’s, Baby Boomers, Homeowners, Federal Reserve, Moody’s Analytics, White, National Economic Council, American, Target, Starbucks, Facebook Locations: New York, United States, Atlanta, Peachtree Corners , Georgia, Decatur, Decatur , Georgia, Carolina, Yugoslavia, Italy, Mexico, Oakland , California, Livermore, San Francisco, California, Los Angeles, San Diego, Francisco, Miami, Honolulu, Rust, Des Moines , Iowa, Dayton , Ohio, Cleveland , Ohio, Scranton , Pennsylvania, Los Angeles , California, North America, America, States, Lansdale , Pennsylvania, Philadelphia
And among those that do, less than a third selected any single benefit such as subsidized child care services (11%), child care referrals and consultations (28%); and back up child care (26%), which gives parents access to a daycare center or babysitter when their usual child care arrangements fall through on a given day. Among those, 37% offer access to backup child care, 16% subsidize child care and 10% provide onsite child care. Among respondents who said they were thinking of quitting their jobs, 41% said their compensation was not high enough to cover child care costs, and 30% said they didn’t have adequate child care. An onsite child care center like one from Bright Horizons can provide licensed and trained care providers and well-qualified early education teachers. Other options to ease working parents’ experienceFor many employers, though, an onsite child care center may be tough to swing.
Persons: , Jessica Chang, “ Covid, ” Chang, Mercer, It’s, We’ve, Stephen Kraemer, Kraemer, hadn’t, Carmen Perez, Perez, Seda, Chang Organizations: New, New York CNN, US Department of Labor, US Department of Health, Human Services, Century Foundation, “ Employers, Adecco Group, Bright Locations: New York, United States, California
While I work at home, I hire local college students to look after my three kids. The college students gain child development experience for their careers. I’ve worked from home as a freelance writer for eight years, and we hire local college students as our nannies. But hiring local college students as our nannies has been a tremendous gift, especially while our kids are young. But more often than not, the college students we’ve hired have been responsible, incredibly caring, and patient with our kids.
Persons: , I’ve, it’s, We’ve, we’ve, They’re Organizations: Service, Facebook
It would be nice to have a larger apartment, but a larger place would come at a much greater cost. I went from paying a couple hundred dollars a month in rent to around $1,500 to live in the living room of a one-bedroom apartment in Manhattan. We live in a small apartment that’s in our budgetMy husband and I have lived in the same one-bedroom apartment in Williamsburg, Brooklyn since 2019. The apartment is under 600 square feet, and the rent is around $3,400 a month. We’d only be able to afford that rent if we cut back in other areas.
Persons: , Zumper, nannies, I’ve, We’ve, We’ll Organizations: Service, Day Care, New Locations: New York City, Florida, Manhattan, Williamsburg , Brooklyn, It’s, New York
When Marquita Wright and her husband were working from home, they split childcare duties. AdvertisementAdvertisementThen my husband went back to the officeAbout 18 months ago, he was told he had to return to the office three days per week. My husband going back to the office meant we needed to reconsider how to balance our work and family life. AdvertisementAdvertisementMy husband's schedule changed againThree months ago, my husband was told he had to start going into the office every day. I wish my husband could return to working from home a few days a week, but it doesn't look like that will happen anytime soon.
Persons: Marquita Wright, Wright, , Jaime, I've, Marley, isn't, I'm Organizations: Service, Catholic, Waldorf Locations: New Orleans, Milwaukee, Miami
IAC narrowly beats Wall Street third-quarter revenue estimates
  + stars: | 2023-11-07 | by ( ) www.reuters.com   time to read: +2 min
Nov 7 (Reuters) - Internet holding company IAC (IAC.O) beat Wall Street third-quarter revenue estimates on Tuesday, as the owner of publisher Dotdash Meredith saw traffic growth return for core brands. IAC owns Dotdash Meredith, America's largest digital and print publisher, as well as brands such as the Daily Beast and care services platform Care.com. Revenue fell 15% to $1.11 billion, narrowly beating analyst estimates, amid a challenging advertising market. Revenue at Dotdash Meredith, its biggest business, fell 11% to $417.5 million, with digital and print revenue declining 4% and 16%, respectively. Consolidated adjusted EBITDA grew 83% year-over-year, with adjusted core earnings growing at home services platform Angi and Dotdash Meredith.
Persons: Dotdash Meredith, We've, Joey Levin, GAI, Helen Coster, Manya, Krishna Chandra Organizations: IAC, Daily, Revenue, Consolidated, Dotdash Media, . Copyright, Manya Saini, Thomson Locations: Dotdash, New York, Bengaluru
I started an investigation into a companyIn my spare time, I started an investigation into a publicly traded company called Care.com, an online babysitting platform. I started my newsletter to get employers' attentionAfter the Care.com story, I decided to start a free newsletter in February 2020, when I was a senior, as a way to get attention from employers. Every Sunday, I'd recap news about short selling in my free newsletter called The Bear Cave. One month into launching the paid newsletter, I saw the business model worked and it could be a full-time job. The Bear Cave now has 53,000 free readers and 1,000 paid subscribers, and I made about $500,000 in revenue over 12 months.
Persons: Edwin Dorsey, Harvey Weinstein, It's Organizations: Street, SEC, YouTube Locations: New York
Child care 'is a public good'Experts say that systemic change, such as broader parental leave and more public funding for child care, must be involved in order for child care to improve at a larger scale. The national annual cost of child care was about $10,853 for one child in 2022, the organization Child Care Aware of America found. In 2023, 67% of parents reported to spend 20% or more of their household income on child care, Care.com found. Use the benefits you have availableYour workplace may have some options to help you find care, such as backup care providers or on-site child care. Meanwhile, California, Colorado, Hawaii and New Mexico passed laws to provide universal preschool in the past year.
Persons: Lauren Rosenberg, Taryn Morrissey, Morrissey, Care.com, Katherine Gallagher Robbins Organizations: Portland Press Herald, Getty, U.S . Bureau of Labor Statistics, American University, U.S . Department of Labor, D.C, Strong, Society for Human Resource Management, District of Columbia, The National Partnership for Women, Washington, Washington , D.C, National Institute for Early Education Research Locations: Portland , Maine, Hamilton, America, Washington, U.S, California , Colorado , Connecticut, Delaware , Maine , Maryland , Massachusetts, Minnesota , New Jersey , New York , Oregon, Rhode Island, Washington ,, Florida , Iowa , Oklahoma , Vermont, West Virginia, Wisconsin, Georgia , Illinois, Maine, New York, , California , Colorado, Hawaii, New Mexico
Nearly two fifths of Americans, 39% have a side hustle, according to an April 2023 Bankrate survey of 2,505 U.S. adults. Here are four side hustles you can do with no experience. Find house sitting gigs on sites like Rover, TrusterHousesitters and Care.com or offer your services in local groups on sites like Facebook and Nextdoor. "They wanted me to do a video survey," she says. Try signing up to take surveys and do focus groups on sites like Mindswarms, Find Focus Groups, Respondent or Fieldwork.
Persons: Latasha Peterson, Peterson, Julie Berninger Organizations: Facebook, PayPal Locations: ShareASale
Jenny Goff, right, reaches out to a child at Central Park Child Care Center in Vancouver, Washington. Ariane Kunze | The Columbian via APWhy child care costs are so highRising fees at child care centers are contributing to the growing costs of child care, as well as inflation and changes in parents' work status, according to Care.com. Many day care centers shuttered during the pandemic, leaving the few that stayed open with limited slots available. The new child fee is usually used to fund teachers' education, books and materials for the classes, she added. Financial advisors say there are several other ways parents can plan ahead to help cover child care costs.
Persons: Jenny Goff, Ariane Kunze, Sophia Bera Daigle, Daigle, Carolyn McClanahan, McClanahan, Care.com Organizations: Central, Child Care Center, AP, CNBC FA Council, Planning Partners, CNBC FA Locations: Vancouver , Washington, Jacksonville , Florida
For anyone looking for a side hustle this summer, pet-sitting might be the way to go. Their owners will need help taking care of them when they're gone. In fact, some might need help whether they end up going away or not. Pet owners need help with an assortment of activities. Whatever help owners need and you're interested in giving, check out sites like Care.com, Wag!, Rover and Sittercity for opportunities.
Persons: Angelique Rewers, BoldHaus, they're, Daniella Flores, Flores
If you're curious to start a side hustle yourself, summer could be a good time to dive in. Be a summer school assistantPost pandemic, many kids are far behind in school. As such, more parents may elect to send their kids to summer school than usual. She calls it a "summer school assistant." The summer school assistant would pick kids up from summer school, help them with their homework and tutor them in any particular subject if needed.
Persons: Angelique Rewers, That's, Airbnb, , Daniella Flores, Flores, Rewers Organizations: Facebook, Rover Locations: Airbnb, San Diego, Portland , Maine, Dallas , Texas, Fort Lauderdale , Florida, New York
The 34-year-old is primarily an actress, but on the side, she's a travel nanny for billionaires in New York. "The qualities it takes to work for the ultra-wealthy is patience and a nuanced perception of anticipating a person's needs." Here's what they said about their lucrative side hustles:Nannying ultra-wealthy kidsNanny-matching site Care.com advises New York families to pay full-time nannies $21.25 per hour, the company's website says. Chauffeuring rich familiesA typical Uber driver in New York makes just over $45,000 per year, according to Glassdoor data. Frank Dorfman (right), alongside one of his daughters, started chauffeuring four years after he retired as a New York police detective.
Childcare workers earn less than half what the average US worker earns — and many are quitting. One Montessori school has seen people quit and had to raise tuition in order to cover staff pay. Almost all of the childcare workers in this story asked to be referred to by first name only, out of fear of professional repercussions. And childcare workers specifically in child daycare services make an average of $12.40 an hour. Sinead, a 24-year-old childcare worker in West Virginia, makes even less than the national average for childcare workers, with pay of $9.50 an hour.
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