Anonymous wrote:I will be starting a part time 2 days/week nanny position. The MB is teacher. There are a few weeks in December and throughout the school year when I know the MB will not work. My question is, should the family pay my full rate even if I am not working, or a partial rate? I am a graduate student and haven't had PTO before and don't know what the norm is. My budget is undoubtedly tight and I will be counting on a certain level of income. I don't think it will work to take off 3-4 weeks in Dec/ Jan. I don't actually know if that is ''standard'', but it seems reasonable to me that my pay be consistent from week to week. I was also thinking about suggesting a partial payment for the month on for the long school break? It would be so nice if I could visit my family as well during winter break. Any grad school nannies who work with professors/ teachers? Thanks
That sort of stuff needs to be negotiated. Generally speaking, there are no benefits to a very PT position like you are speaking of. I do this type of work and I negotiate what I need. I ask for guaranteed hours, but I am willing to be flexible and do a weekend night of babysitting instead of my normal hours if they don't need me one day. I have usually been told that I get Christmas week off (however many days that I normally work each week with that particular position), and this past year, the family that included that also kind of threw in NYE/NYD as they were still out of town (I did a short 3 hours one weekend for that, instead of my usual 10 hours). Federal holidays that the kids aren't in school and one of the parents was home (and didn't want help with me taking the kids the kids out for a bit), either were paid and no work or paid with a make-up babysitting day (I "worked" about half and got the other half off totally - all paid). Sick days we assumed I wasn't paid, the ONLY time I was sick for one day, I asked if I could get paid and make up the hours which they were very willing to do for me.
You can try to get them to pay you for the days they don't need you, but some won't be willing to do that. Guaranteed hours can usually be done in the way that if you normally work 2 5 hour days (10 hours total), that they ALLOW you to work at least 10 hours a week. So if one day they didn't need you, then making it available for you to work the other 5 hours for them on another day (so you don't lose out on the chance to earn that money). Again, most won't pay for all federal holidays and Christmas/Spring break etc without you doing some kind of work. I did a few "basic housekeeping" days, when they were going to be out and I just vacuumed and dusted and cleaned the kitchen and bathroom floors (like 2 hours of work instead of 5 hours), but I enjoyed being with the kids and so opted for babysitting on weekends more often.