Anonymous wrote:You can't garnish your employee's wages without a court judgement. Pay for friggin' aftercare until she gets it sorted out. What the hell do you want us to say?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:^^ This doesn't make any sense. Whether it's the temporary greencard or a valid V-1 the nanny she hired is LEGAL to work in the United States.
Are you/she paying all taxes? If so, there's nothing wrong here.
PP here. My mistake. She won't be able to legally drive in the US. This was OP's responsibility to confirm.
You can't garnish your employee's wages.
Wrong again. You can obtain a valid driver's license with a V-1. So it sounds like at the time of hire, she was able to provide up to date documentation that showed she was both eligible to work and drive in the US while waiting for her permit greencard.
And that the nanny has let the documentation lapse and THAT (and not the OP's poor hiring choices) caused the problem.
This is very tough place she has put you in OP. Can you perhaps call immigration with her tomorrow and see if you can sort out the actual timeline of her permanent V-1?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:^^ This doesn't make any sense. Whether it's the temporary greencard or a valid V-1 the nanny she hired is LEGAL to work in the United States.
Are you/she paying all taxes? If so, there's nothing wrong here.
PP here. My mistake. She won't be able to legally drive in the US. This was OP's responsibility to confirm.
You can't garnish your employee's wages.
Anonymous wrote:^^ This doesn't make any sense. Whether it's the temporary greencard or a valid V-1 the nanny she hired is LEGAL to work in the United States.
Are you/she paying all taxes? If so, there's nothing wrong here.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:You don't charge your nanny for aftercare. You made the decision to hire someone whose green card status was up in the air. You pay. If she can't perform the duties she was hired to perform, find someone else.
I think it's actually illegal to garnish her wages.
Her greencard status isn't "up in the air" she has the temporary but DMV doesn't accept temp greencard so she had to get a work visa until the permanent greencard arrives.
She lives with us. What I am suppose to do? Tell her to get out? That doesn't seem right.
Or pay another $200/week for aftercare and have my daughter miss all the activities we've paid for (including her social skills classes for ADHD)?
I am overwhelmed and looking for help. Not criticism.
Anonymous wrote:You don't charge your nanny for aftercare. You made the decision to hire someone whose green card status was up in the air. You pay. If she can't perform the duties she was hired to perform, find someone else.
I think it's actually illegal to garnish her wages.