Anonymous wrote:This is OP with an update. She worked two days last week, left early yesterday and now will be out till at least Thursday. Really don't know what to do. She is wonderful with the kids but we are paying for a lot of unworked days.
Anonymous wrote:This is OP with an update. She worked two days last week, left early yesterday and now will be out till at least Thursday. Really don't know what to do. She is wonderful with the kids but we are paying for a lot of unworked days.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:24/7 nanny here, sn and behavioral problems
I have unlimited sick leave... but I have to provide a doctor's note if a single injury or illness is prolonged, especially since I'm arranging for coverage and my employer is stuck double paying for 24 hour care if they're not in state.
I have unlimited PTO and vacation in this position... but my employer is out-of-state for 3-7 weeks at a time, and then they're home with no work until they leave again. If they're back for under a week in between trips, there's no PTO/vacation allowed. I'm planning on taking 2-3 weeks off the next time they're home for a month, then 3 weeks the following time they're home for a month. All told, I'll have about 10 weeks of limited/no duty for the year, but they feel that I've earned it.
This is a pretty unusual situation though.
Not really.
I always negotiate for unlimited sick leave. I always negotiate for at least 2 weeks of vacation of my choice and expect that I will have (some) time off when the parents are available to be with their children.
The parents situation is unusual here.
Extremely unusual. Interesting but not really applicable to most FT nanny positions.
Again, I said I *always* negotiate for unlimited sick time. I've worked pt, ft and 24 hour care. I also have several friends who negotiate for unlimited sick time. None of us abuse that privilege, or we wouldn't get it with our next family.
Are you being willfully obtuse? The unlimited sick time is not what is unusual about your situation (our nanny gets that too). The 2-3 weeks off at multiple times of the year is what is unusual.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:24/7 nanny here, sn and behavioral problems
I have unlimited sick leave... but I have to provide a doctor's note if a single injury or illness is prolonged, especially since I'm arranging for coverage and my employer is stuck double paying for 24 hour care if they're not in state.
I have unlimited PTO and vacation in this position... but my employer is out-of-state for 3-7 weeks at a time, and then they're home with no work until they leave again. If they're back for under a week in between trips, there's no PTO/vacation allowed. I'm planning on taking 2-3 weeks off the next time they're home for a month, then 3 weeks the following time they're home for a month. All told, I'll have about 10 weeks of limited/no duty for the year, but they feel that I've earned it.
This is a pretty unusual situation though.
Not really.
I always negotiate for unlimited sick leave. I always negotiate for at least 2 weeks of vacation of my choice and expect that I will have (some) time off when the parents are available to be with their children.
The parents situation is unusual here.
Extremely unusual. Interesting but not really applicable to most FT nanny positions.
Again, I said I *always* negotiate for unlimited sick time. I've worked pt, ft and 24 hour care. I also have several friends who negotiate for unlimited sick time. None of us abuse that privilege, or we wouldn't get it with our next family.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:24/7 nanny here, sn and behavioral problems
I have unlimited sick leave... but I have to provide a doctor's note if a single injury or illness is prolonged, especially since I'm arranging for coverage and my employer is stuck double paying for 24 hour care if they're not in state.
I have unlimited PTO and vacation in this position... but my employer is out-of-state for 3-7 weeks at a time, and then they're home with no work until they leave again. If they're back for under a week in between trips, there's no PTO/vacation allowed. I'm planning on taking 2-3 weeks off the next time they're home for a month, then 3 weeks the following time they're home for a month. All told, I'll have about 10 weeks of limited/no duty for the year, but they feel that I've earned it.
This is a pretty unusual situation though.
Not really.
I always negotiate for unlimited sick leave. I always negotiate for at least 2 weeks of vacation of my choice and expect that I will have (some) time off when the parents are available to be with their children.
The parents situation is unusual here.
Extremely unusual. Interesting but not really applicable to most FT nanny positions.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:24/7 nanny here, sn and behavioral problems
I have unlimited sick leave... but I have to provide a doctor's note if a single injury or illness is prolonged, especially since I'm arranging for coverage and my employer is stuck double paying for 24 hour care if they're not in state.
I have unlimited PTO and vacation in this position... but my employer is out-of-state for 3-7 weeks at a time, and then they're home with no work until they leave again. If they're back for under a week in between trips, there's no PTO/vacation allowed. I'm planning on taking 2-3 weeks off the next time they're home for a month, then 3 weeks the following time they're home for a month. All told, I'll have about 10 weeks of limited/no duty for the year, but they feel that I've earned it.
This is a pretty unusual situation though.
Not really.
I always negotiate for unlimited sick leave. I always negotiate for at least 2 weeks of vacation of my choice and expect that I will have (some) time off when the parents are available to be with their children.
The parents situation is unusual here.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:24/7 nanny here, sn and behavioral problems
I have unlimited sick leave... but I have to provide a doctor's note if a single injury or illness is prolonged, especially since I'm arranging for coverage and my employer is stuck double paying for 24 hour care if they're not in state.
I have unlimited PTO and vacation in this position... but my employer is out-of-state for 3-7 weeks at a time, and then they're home with no work until they leave again. If they're back for under a week in between trips, there's no PTO/vacation allowed. I'm planning on taking 2-3 weeks off the next time they're home for a month, then 3 weeks the following time they're home for a month. All told, I'll have about 10 weeks of limited/no duty for the year, but they feel that I've earned it.
This is a pretty unusual situation though.
Not really.
I always negotiate for unlimited sick leave. I always negotiate for at least 2 weeks of vacation of my choice and expect that I will have (some) time off when the parents are available to be with their children.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:24/7 nanny here, sn and behavioral problems
I have unlimited sick leave... but I have to provide a doctor's note if a single injury or illness is prolonged, especially since I'm arranging for coverage and my employer is stuck double paying for 24 hour care if they're not in state.
I have unlimited PTO and vacation in this position... but my employer is out-of-state for 3-7 weeks at a time, and then they're home with no work until they leave again. If they're back for under a week in between trips, there's no PTO/vacation allowed. I'm planning on taking 2-3 weeks off the next time they're home for a month, then 3 weeks the following time they're home for a month. All told, I'll have about 10 weeks of limited/no duty for the year, but they feel that I've earned it.
This is a pretty unusual situation though.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:This is why we have our nanny ACCRUE PTO. We don't hand them three weeks of vacation at the start of the year. Each pay period they accrue a portion of PTO. We also put in the contract that unless there's a true medical emergency we prefer they not take unpaid time off.
Between the paid vacation the nanny earns and the times we travel and don't need the nanny but pay them, they generally get about six weeks or more off each year (Covid notwithstanding).
How do you handle sick leave?
Are you unfamiliar with the concept of PTO?