Anonymous wrote:We’ve had our nanny for 5 years and really love her, but given the current circumstances she just may not make sense for our family anymore. First off, her hours are 8-5 and given that DH and I are working from home at least through the end of the year, we really need someone from like 10-4. I don’t think it’s right to cut her salary, but am not sure it makes sense to pay her the same rate to work 3 hours less per day for the next 6+ months. While she is happy to help with other tasks, she doesn’t drive so she can’t run errands, and she has offered to do some light cleaning but she is not a good cleaner. The other big piece is that our older child is in 3rd grade and needs help with schoolwork which unfortunately our nanny can’t really provide.
That said, DH and I typically work long hours out of the home so when things go back to more of a normal we will need FT childcare again so we are covered for summers, sick days, other school days off etc. What I am thinking would maybe be ideal is someone who is a hybrid house cleaner slash nanny and could go back and forth between the two as needed - but I know that is hard to find.
Alternately, maybe we just get a fun college aged sitter for now to help for 5-6 hours per day since that’s really all we need.
Anyone else finding that their existing childcare isn’t as ideal anymore as your needs have changed? What would others do in this situation?
Given that she's been with you for 5 years, I'd try to keep her by offering her two choices. You used 45 hours before and now only need 30. Offer her pay equivalent to 40 hours (and use the $ saved to get cleaners). Nanny might not mind less pay for less hours since she won't have to look for a new family or risk having a gap of no income if the new start date doesn't line up. If total income is more important to nanny, see if you can help her get part time care. For example, there might be famines that need that 8-10am slot. I telework but my daycare reopened. So I will now have to get my 4 year old ready in the morning (eat get dressed) then do a drop off which takes 30 minutes total of driving round-trip just to do drop off and come back to start telework. This kind of very short PT help is hard to find if one is looking for a long term person, so if your nanny offers that on Nextdoor or similar, I'd bet she'll find a family that will take the morning hours. If you post the ad praising the nanny (of course with the nanny's permission) rather than just telling her to do it herself, you'll get even more responses from families.
I understand that paying for 45 hours plus the OT rates for tjose 5 hours you dont even use doesn't make sense. But during this extra stressful times, i think dependable care, someone you trust and someone your child likes is pretty valuable beyond just the $ it costs.