| Yes tell them ASAP. It's the right thing to do |
I would never hire someone like you. I bet you have a real hard time hiding your negative, hateful, unprofessional attitude from parents and children. |
You must tell them this immediately, before the holidays. |
She should tell them right away because it is OP who is at fault. The family hired her and she accepted months ago. She is still a month from starting and just waiting on a final work agreement, which means all the negotiations are done. Why does she need this a month before a start date to have the final document? Also, why is it unusual for a family to not be in frequent contact with a nanny who isn't starting for months? The family isn't being flaky. OP is. The family hired *early* to take care of their child care needs. If OP needed to have the final document a month before starting, she should have warned them that if they didn't meet her date, she would need to find other work. She didn't do that. So, she is already screwing them over by changing her mind late (for them). So she owes it to them to let them know now. Besides, OP isn't leaving because the family is flaky. She is leaving because she needs a job that pays better because her financial situation changed. She is just trying to make it their fault by saying they aren't communicating with her. |
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Both parties nanny and family are to blame.
Poor communication all around. Nanny can be the professional that she wants to be seen as and give notice now. |
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It's their own fault for being so flakey.
I mean, I get that they have careers and young children, but still....Their word should hold some weight. I would just let them know that you feel at this time that you are not a good match, wish them luck in their search and make sure you let them know ASAP since the position was to start soon. |
Oh, the parents have no obligation to treat OP propeu? They dropped the ball by not doing what they were supposed to do so, obviously, they do not deserve the courtesy of anything. |