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If I need a babysitter then I’m not leaving my kids alone to drive your child home.
My babysitters all use Uber both ways. |
| This is an odd dynamic. They are responsible for your kids. Suddenly you come home and now you are responsible for them? I see it as a courtesy but honestly, this is part of why I think it's worth the extra $2 per hour for someone a little older/has own transportation |
| I would drive my daughter, simply because when I was a teenager I hated it when the dads would drive me home. |
I remember this too. Never had an issue with one of the Dad's driving me home. I only recall one family not driving me home and I had to walk alone and I never sat for them again as I was freaked out at 13 to walk home alone in the dark at that hour and I didn't have a good way to call my parents who would come get me (nor did they want me walking alone). |
Me too but that was a good 30 years ago. My sitter who babysits late at night will be at least 16 or 17 and can drive. |
But your daughter is not you. She is her own person. Did you hate having a dad drive you home because he was touching your leg inappropriately, or because you're a tightly-wound paranoid person? |
But, does she have a car. Can drive and having a car are two different issues? |
| If you tell my kid to take an uber, you'll have to find a new babysitter. My teens don't uber, and I certainly wouldn't permit it late at night alone. |
You mean damned if they do sexually harass someone, and damned if they don’t treat women the same as men? If so, then yes, that’s true. I assume you did not mean to suggest that those are the same things. |
| I woukd assume that most people getting a sitter at night had a drink or two. Just go pick her up. It is probably safer all around. |
| I don't hire sitters who aren't old enough to drive and don't have their own cars to get themselves there and home. It's just not worth it to me--I'd rather pay more for someone who is more independent. |
| I babysat a lot as a kid (starting at age 13). One of my parents would drop me off and it was *always* the dad who drove me home afterwards. I never had any kind of remotely uncomfortable moment with them - it was slightly awkward but nothing at all inappropriate or did I ever feel nervous. That being said, we've never hired a sitter who needed to be driven home. We've always hired sitters who could get themselves home by either driving themselves or lived close enough to walk home. My oldest is now old enough to babysit and she only sits for families within walking distance (until she can drive herself). |
| I, a mother, always drive our sitter home. Never DH. If she can’t easily get here, I will go pick her up. |
Not all dads are creeps, not all women make false accusations, but both can and do happen. Smart men (I'm speaking as a dad) dont put themselves in situations alone with young girls. As a matter of face youth coaching rules even prohibit it. This is also becoming common in my workplace that many men won't take a closed door meeting alone with a female colleague. It is not a big deal and an easy insurance policy. |
I'm a man and have 800 people under me in the org chart. An accusation was found to be false for harrassment on a fellow colleague. This was devastating and traumatic for him and his family. Luckily the claim was dismissed. Along with the blessing and guidance of HR and legal myself and a few other men have implemented this policy. It leaves no room for interpretation or opportunity for a career ending false accusation. This is the climate we live in. A man in guilty in the court of public opinion without even the facts being presented. Until this changes, I'm not putting myself in any situation that could be her word against mine because there will ne no situation where I'm alone with an opportunist who can destroy my career with words. |