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Call around and see whatva CNA is paid per hour in a hospital or nursing facility. See if there are others being paid privately. Call agencies to see what they pay.
If you are new to all this, I recommend you call the Labor board. IRS does not recognize CNAs as self-employed. It will be up to your employer to take out payroll taxes and see they get to the correct agencies. You will get a W2 at the eoy not a 1099.
The VA will pay what it pays, if this payment is coming from VA.
Ask them what payment to expect.
I think I may be misunderstanding your question, so a little more info may help me to provide a bit better answer to you.
Good luck.
I'm thinking 15 an hour if it's under the table but I could be very wrong
There needs to be an accounting for the monies spent. 'Under the table' sounds shady, b/c it often is. There's babysitting and paying a 15 yo to watch your kids--yeah, you pay THEM 'under the table'--they aren't employees.
You pay a person for 39 hrs of work ( basically FT) and so you better be upfront and work out the way you get a contract with them. Yes, you can call them a 1099 employee and paying taxes and such is their responsibility. Sadly, none of us is 'safe' from the taxation of practically every cent that comes into our lives.
When I worked in Elder Care, one of my clients kids thought I needed to be paid a great deal more. He went to the company and they worked out a 'tipping' schedule and money was paid to them, privately and then taxed appropriately and I saw a huge raise--but it was all on the up and up. It showed up on my W-2 as an hourly adjustment.