Rickortreat,
I can't speak for your situation, but my take on this is that if you were doing the work around here, you should be looking for more money. Just guessing at your experience, I'd say you should be in the $22.50/hour range. The fact that it's a graveyard thing might add or subtract from that, but I don't know.
My advice: GET OUT! IT skills are in demand, and it is imperative that you find a place where you are not only using your current IT skills, but developing new ones on a company's time and dime. The worst situation is to work as a part-timer/consultant only during the time when your skills are at their sharpest, only to have to train yourself in new ones later on, at your cost.
A personal friend is one of the brightest minds I've ever met in the field of computers. He should be a Network Administrator or Director of Information Systems somewhere. Instead, he's out-of-work. Why? He tried to make it on his own, and when his projects dried up, his skills were out-of-date, and his resume showed a large gap in his "real" work experience. Such is the folly of consulting; if you can make it, there are rewards to be had, but if you fail, you fail *BIG*. If you don't have a list of on-going loyal clients who you know you can rely on needing your services far, far into the future, then you need to stay away from any type of individual consulting except as a source of ADDITIONAL income.
Sure, call me the evil corporate swine, but the pay is decent, and I sleep well at night...in my own bed rather than in a hotel room. I did the consulting thing for 4 years, and I determined that the only person who makes real money is the owner of the consulting company. I went to a company, and had a 25% pay raise within one year, coming in a guaranteed paycheck twice a month. A year after that, I was the Director of Information Systems for a company on the NYSE. I'm back to my technical roots now, but I'm being paid well, treated well, and I'm doing what I enjoy - and you're not going to get that in the job you're in.
Get out while you can. Technical skills don't age well.