Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:The "contracts" that we as nannies sign with our employers should detail our start date, responsibilities, wages, and benefits. These agreements can be used to sue our employers if they are not paying us properly and they can be used by employers to fire us with cause for not meeting our responsibilities (aka we cannot then collect unemployment). That being said a contract that states you will work for X weeks/months/years is unenforceable because the majority of states have labor laws where employees are "at-will" with some exceptions (usually those exceptions are professions where there is a labor union who has negotiated a grievance process that has to be gone through before an employee can be terminated).
^My daddy negotiates labor contracts for a living and that's what he told me when I negotiated my first working agreement as a nanny.
Your daddy? ???
The Husband of her Mother... thats a daddy.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:The "contracts" that we as nannies sign with our employers should detail our start date, responsibilities, wages, and benefits. These agreements can be used to sue our employers if they are not paying us properly and they can be used by employers to fire us with cause for not meeting our responsibilities (aka we cannot then collect unemployment). That being said a contract that states you will work for X weeks/months/years is unenforceable because the majority of states have labor laws where employees are "at-will" with some exceptions (usually those exceptions are professions where there is a labor union who has negotiated a grievance process that has to be gone through before an employee can be terminated).
^My daddy negotiates labor contracts for a living and that's what he told me when I negotiated my first working agreement as a nanny.
Your daddy? ???
Anonymous wrote:The "contracts" that we as nannies sign with our employers should detail our start date, responsibilities, wages, and benefits. These agreements can be used to sue our employers if they are not paying us properly and they can be used by employers to fire us with cause for not meeting our responsibilities (aka we cannot then collect unemployment). That being said a contract that states you will work for X weeks/months/years is unenforceable because the majority of states have labor laws where employees are "at-will" with some exceptions (usually those exceptions are professions where there is a labor union who has negotiated a grievance process that has to be gone through before an employee can be terminated).
^My daddy negotiates labor contracts for a living and that's what he told me when I negotiated my first working agreement as a nanny.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I'd give it at least another week and if you are still not happy, I'd find another job. The first week at a new job can be tough for anyone so I would at least stick it out another week and see how it goes.
As far as the contract, it really isn't a contract. They are called work agreements as nannies are at will employees. If you decide to stay with them, you should remind them that they need to sign the contract and you should also have a copy that you both have signed.
Stop with the bad information. Nannies are at-will employees BY DEFAULT but a contract REMOVES them from at-will employment.
No it does not. A contract is NOT legally binding at all and even if they all signed the contract and it said she had to give 4 weeks notice and she gave one, nothing is going to happen.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I'd give it at least another week and if you are still not happy, I'd find another job. The first week at a new job can be tough for anyone so I would at least stick it out another week and see how it goes.
As far as the contract, it really isn't a contract. They are called work agreements as nannies are at will employees. If you decide to stay with them, you should remind them that they need to sign the contract and you should also have a copy that you both have signed.
Stop with the bad information. Nannies are at-will employees BY DEFAULT but a contract REMOVES them from at-will employment.
Anonymous wrote:I'd give it at least another week and if you are still not happy, I'd find another job. The first week at a new job can be tough for anyone so I would at least stick it out another week and see how it goes.
As far as the contract, it really isn't a contract. They are called work agreements as nannies are at will employees. If you decide to stay with them, you should remind them that they need to sign the contract and you should also have a copy that you both have signed.