Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Nanny again- How about you ask yourself if you’d be okay if your boss asked you to do the same. What is wrong with you?
Lol. Ok, nanny. Are you on DCUM while you are being paid to be watching kids? What is wrong with you? Have some respect for your job and employer. 🙄
1) I’m on the west coast 2) I’m with elementary kids at paid to be on call at home because unlike op, my employers are amazing. They would never ask me to come in when the kids have or were exposes to covid!!!
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Nanny again- How about you ask yourself if you’d be okay if your boss asked you to do the same. What is wrong with you?
Lol. Ok, nanny. Are you on DCUM while you are being paid to be watching kids? What is wrong with you? Have some respect for your job and employer. 🙄
Anonymous wrote:These responses are insane to me. 1. OP didn't give the nanny the week off, she told her she shouldn't come to the house since there is a Covid positive child in the house. According to OP she is still helping out, just not coming to the house. 2. CDC guidance says the negative child, if fully vaccinated can go to school. Her child's school has different rules, but it doesn't mean that her child is positive by association. 3. There is no harm in asking the nanny, who is getting paid, if she will accompany the negative child outside while both are masks. It's a pretty low risk ask, and if she says no, she says no. I think you all who are making it out like OP is some crazy demanding person who has no respect for her nanny are out of line.
Anonymous wrote:These responses are insane to me. 1. OP didn't give the nanny the week off, she told her she shouldn't come to the house since there is a Covid positive child in the house. According to OP she is still helping out, just not coming to the house. 2. CDC guidance says the negative child, if fully vaccinated can go to school. Her child's school has different rules, but it doesn't mean that her child is positive by association. 3. There is no harm in asking the nanny, who is getting paid, if she will accompany the negative child outside while both are masks. It's a pretty low risk ask, and if she says no, she says no. I think you all who are making it out like OP is some crazy demanding person who has no respect for her nanny are out of line.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:NP and I am super surprised by the responses on this. The nanny is being paid and has been in communication with the family and doing other work this week. She isn’t on vacation and it is not realistic for her to expect the entire week off for this. I think it is perfectly fine to ask this and think any nanny worth her apt would be fine with it.
The nanny does not want to get Covid! She’s helping out where she can but asking her to be exposed is simply not right. Jesus, it’s ten days max! OP can’t keep her kids occupied for one week?!
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:If your nanny ends up cat give covid from her exposure to your family, are you going to give her a couple of weeks of PTO to recuperate?
Based on what we know about OP so far, I think this is a given. I also don’t think OP would risk getting her nanny sick for this reason, and one of the reasons she’s contemplating this is that she’s thought it through and sees it as extremely low risk.
Anonymous wrote:If your nanny ends up cat give covid from her exposure to your family, are you going to give her a couple of weeks of PTO to recuperate?