Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:People can put it into contracts, but as we all know enforcing any nanny contract in a court of law has never been successfully done before so no one is truly bound by law to one.
Essentially they are Gentlemen's Agreements, just in writing.
This is NOT true. Why do you constantly spout this? Nanny contracts are just as enforceable as any other document that you sign. Do not sign something you don't intend to be bound by.
This is most likely someone from Nanny Biz Review, it is how they sell their crazy A-Z contract
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:People can put it into contracts, but as we all know enforcing any nanny contract in a court of law has never been successfully done before so no one is truly bound by law to one.
Essentially they are Gentlemen's Agreements, just in writing.
This is NOT true. Why do you constantly spout this? Nanny contracts are just as enforceable as any other document that you sign. Do not sign something you don't intend to be bound by.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:People can put it into contracts, but as we all know enforcing any nanny contract in a court of law has never been successfully done before so no one is truly bound by law to one.
Essentially they are Gentlemen's Agreements, just in writing.
This is NOT true. Why do you constantly spout this? Nanny contracts are just as enforceable as any other document that you sign. Do not sign something you don't intend to be bound by.
It IS true. And I'm a different poster, so you may stop pretending it's only one.
If you still believe yourself, please name one single case where a court has ruled that the duration of a nanny job must be upheld.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:People can put it into contracts, but as we all know enforcing any nanny contract in a court of law has never been successfully done before so no one is truly bound by law to one.
Essentially they are Gentlemen's Agreements, just in writing.
This is NOT true. Why do you constantly spout this? Nanny contracts are just as enforceable as any other document that you sign. Do not sign something you don't intend to be bound by.
Anonymous wrote:People can put it into contracts, but as we all know enforcing any nanny contract in a court of law has never been successfully done before so no one is truly bound by law to one.
Essentially they are Gentlemen's Agreements, just in writing.
Anonymous wrote:We have it in our contract that both sides have to give 30 days notice (barring theft, injury to the child, etc...) What's fair in one direction is fair in the other.
But the truth is, of course, that there is little legal recourse for anyone who violates that. Nannies can just vanish, employers can give zero notice, it all comes down to basic human decency in the end.
Anonymous wrote:You are an at will employee and you do not have to give any notice.