Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Sure. Look behind door number two. No hired helper is any more perfect in every way, than you are, OP. Just decide how many doors are you are willing to put your child through, and exactly what are your priorities.
OP, ignore this. You do not have to stick with a bad nanny just because you don't want to go through another switch. A switch would be better for your child than sticking with someone who isn't being honest about at least this one thing.
How many bad sitters have you had?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Sure. Look behind door number two. No hired helper is any more perfect in every way, than you are, OP. Just decide how many doors are you are willing to put your child through, and exactly what are your priorities.
OP, ignore this. You do not have to stick with a bad nanny just because you don't want to go through another switch. A switch would be better for your child than sticking with someone who isn't being honest about at least this one thing.
Anonymous wrote:Talk to her and let her know she needs to use her car and if it is a daily activity, you are not paying for it.
Anonymous wrote:You say she runs errands. I'm assuming she does this with the baby in tow. Have you ever, even once, said she could pick up something she needed while she was out running errands for you?
Anonymous wrote:Sure. Look behind door number two. No hired helper is any more perfect in every way, than you are, OP. Just decide how many doors are you are willing to put your child through, and exactly what are your priorities.
Anonymous wrote:I'd ask her about it first. She should have double checked with you first, but I wouldn't immediately jump to firing her. Just ask. Although, you might wind up looking for a new nanny if she quits once finding out that put a GPS on the car without telling her.
Then again, I'm the type of MB who would ask my nanny if she'd been doing a lot of driving because I'd noticed the car had a lot of miles on it before I installed a GPS tracker.