Anonymous wrote:When i was at Stern, i read the best case study. A company noticed that 20% of hourly payroll was going to vacation/sick days, in other words, 20% was paying people NOT to come to work. The company raised hourly salaries by 20% and did away with paid vacation/sick days. Suddenly, no one felt the need to take vacation and miraculously no one got sick again.
Anonymous wrote:Absolutely not. You pay her if YOU cancel. That seems fine and fair to me; she set aside time that she could’ve used for something else/make money somewhere else.
But to pay someone who cancels on you? That’s insane.
Anonymous wrote:Absolutely not. You pay her if YOU cancel. That seems fine and fair to me; she set aside time that she could’ve used for something else/make money somewhere else.
But to pay someone who cancels on you? That’s insane.
Anonymous wrote:I have had the worst luck with part time sitters but thought I finally found someone good for the one day a week I really need it most because my kids have different activities at the same time in different directions. She works for me on Tuesdays and started with us at the beginning of September. She worked 2 Tuesdays and all was good, and has now called out the last 2 Tuesdays in a row at the last minute which left me scrambling. When we hired her I told her I would pay her every Tuesday for the entire school year even if I didn’t need her because the class was canceled or it was a holiday/break. I didn’t pay her for the last 2 weeks when she cancelled and she texted tonight to ask if I am still paying her for the past 2 weeks since she didn’t receive payment. I was pretty shocked but what does everyone think, should I pay her? I feel like it sets a bad precedent for her cancelling on me whenever she feels like it and truly am not even confident this will last.
Anonymous wrote:I would not pay her if she cancels / doesn’t show. That’s WILD that she asked for payment when she didn’t show up.
That said, I know a lot of nannies negotiate PTO, maybe she thought it was a nanny situation? But I think those are pretty much always reserved for full time, 40 hr nanny employees.