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Reply to "The dishwasher job creep trick "
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[quote=Anonymous][quote=Anonymous][quote=Anonymous][quote=Anonymous][quote=Anonymous][quote=Anonymous][quote=Anonymous][quote=Anonymous][quote=Anonymous][quote=Anonymous]Emptying the dishwasher = housekeeping??? She’s not asked to clean the dish washer, she’s asked to empty the dishes out of the dish washer [/quote] Look. At. The. Thread. Title. It starts with the dishwasher, then moves on to other housekeeping duties. Families will test the water to see what they can get away with. [/quote] If you are using the home 8-10 hours a day you can contribute to caring for it.[/quote] Do you vacuum your office or clean the toilets in your office? Didn't think do! Your house is YOUR responsibility to keep clean, not the Nanny's![/quote] Apples to oranges comparison.. our office has about a couple hundred people who use the common areas, kitchens and bathrooms.[/quote] No it’s not. If your nanny is using the home 8-10 hrs since she’s there then guess what, you are using the work area 8-10 hours a day. You should be contributing to caring for it. Or is it only different bc it’s a nanny and therefore beneath you?[/quote] You are not getting it. At home its 2-3 adults using the home and everyone knows each other very well. At work you know probably 10% of your coworkers and its a liability issue for the company to let people clean areas everyone might have different allergies need different accommodations etc. the building is likely leased and they have their own cleaning crew in the contract. Also just counting the days, nanny is home during the week and parents during weekends so say everyone takes turns to clean the areas say once every 3 days. At work it about 240 working days and your turn would come probably once a year and that would be an expensive task management job by itself![/quote] You are not getting it. You want your nanny to clean up after you bc you’re paying for it and feel entitled. Heaven forbid someone feels that way about you though. You don’t want to clean up after your co workers or bosses bc, yuck it’s gross. Guess what, that’s how a nanny feels. Hire a cleaning service like your office does. Oh and there are offices that have 5 ppl. And btw, if your nanny gets hurt on the job that’s a liability for you. [/quote] Not all offices have cleaners. And, nanny is using the home. She can run a vacuum over the common areas she uses and wipe down the counters and do basic things as part of the job. You want to be a replacement parent when its convenient but not willing to do the actual work. I love how many rant about after a job terminates there is no contact and go on and on about the bonding, and yet, when it comes to being a part of the household, its a hard no.[/quote] Keep trying to argue that it’s above you to clean the office area you use. No one wants to be a replacement parent to your child. A caregivers roles is to provide care for your child. You can interpret it anyway you like. You can run a vacuum over the common areas in your office that you use. You can wipe down counters and do basic things as part of your office job. You want to work, have benefits, get retirement, have a 401k but not willing to actually work to make your office area nice. No one is trying to be part of your filthy household and thank goodness I do have a contract. Unorganized ppl such as yourself must be hell to work for. [/quote]
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