Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I wouldn’t do it. Have your youngest go 3 mornings a week for the next year ( sept 20-may 21) . Plenty of kids do this for the year before K and do just fine. The stress of not having coverage for sick days snow days random days off would make me keep the Nanny unless you have family around to step in in these situations.
Bump it up to 5 mornings next year.
Anonymous wrote:I wouldn’t do it. Have your youngest go 3 mornings a week for the next year ( sept 20-may 21) . Plenty of kids do this for the year before K and do just fine. The stress of not having coverage for sick days snow days random days off would make me keep the Nanny unless you have family around to step in in these situations.
Anonymous wrote:It’s so hard without a nanny. We transitioned our youngest in September when she was 1.5 and I’m home again with a sick toddler. Since September, DH and I used up all our PTO and vacation time. I’ve been out with one or both kids for five workdays since January 1st. Five days and it’s only the 21st! Kindergartener has to be in extended care after school and it’s a 1.5 hour drop off and a race to get to both before closing. On top of the absences and illnesses, all the work that nanny used to do is back on us - the kids laundry, kids sheets and towels, cleaning their rooms and picking up family room. Plus making lunches and cleaning lunch containers.
It’s hard.
Anonymous wrote:I see his point because aside from the coverage you don’t seem to be getting a lot of value for your money. That said, it seems like you really do need the coverage.
I would switch to a different caregiver that takes on more of a family manager role. If you are paying for full-time care, I would want someone who unloads the dishwasher and packs lunches and does all the kids’ laundry and picks up drycleaning and goes grocery shopping...etc.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I see his point because aside from the coverage you don’t seem to be getting a lot of value for your money. That said, it seems like you really do need the coverage.
I would switch to a different caregiver that takes on more of a family manager role. If you are paying for full-time care, I would want someone who unloads the dishwasher and packs lunches and does all the kids’ laundry and picks up drycleaning and goes grocery shopping...etc.
Sweet heaven.
She has THREE CHILDREN. There is ALWAYS
one child sick or getting over being sick who has to stay home
a teacher professional dev. day
snow day
holiday from school - yom kippur, veteran's day, memorial day, columbus day, MLK day, presidents day, a week off in spring (TWO if you lived in DC), about 8 or 9 days for winter break, then all summer
getting 3 kids out the door by 7am BY HERSELF.
summer - 3 kids in camp is a LOT of money.
Keep your nanny. Pay her what you need to, and have the preschooler go 3 mornings/week. Many children do it, and the benefit to your entire family will be huge. Or at least to YOU, personally, and since YOU do all the extra kid/household stuff then it matters to YOU. You get 5 votes, your husband gets 1 vote.
Anonymous wrote:I see his point because aside from the coverage you don’t seem to be getting a lot of value for your money. That said, it seems like you really do need the coverage.
I would switch to a different caregiver that takes on more of a family manager role. If you are paying for full-time care, I would want someone who unloads the dishwasher and packs lunches and does all the kids’ laundry and picks up drycleaning and goes grocery shopping...etc.