Anonymous wrote: Initially, my hours were going to be set for about 20 a week after a month but that changed as mb's schedule was going to be all over the place. I wasn't a fan of working varied hours but we made an agreement that I would get paid at minimum for 15 hours a week whether I was needed or not and I'd know up to 3-4 months in advance my schedule. Cool.
I was going along with this despite mb having to change the schedule after initially giving me a different one at times, as well as canceling a day here and there with a few days or one day notice. I didn't like it but let it go. We have a pretty good relationship. I enjoy being with the kids and the parents are nice and welcoming people.
Long story short, last week I wasn't feeling well but 100% was still planning on going into work. I called mb to ask her if she would be fine if I didn't take kids out for an outing and instead stayed at the home as she'd wanted me to take them out so she could have time to herself while off of work. Before I could ask to say that, she said she thought it was better I stayed home so I didn't get her or the kids sick. I asked if she was sure because I was never planning on staying home and she said yes. Last week I was only scheduled for 10 hours. She asked if she could just pay me for the 6 hours I worked. I paused and said yes but was pretty upset and disappointed. In almost a year of working with them, it was my first time not coming in because I myself wasn't feeling well and while we didn't go over paid sick days, I was honestly surprised that after one time, it was grounds for not paying for a 15 hour week. I regularly take the kids out and never ask for gas money as well as taking them out for lunch, etc without expectation of repayment often. After the constant schedule changes, canceled days then this, I decided I would give notice.
I was scheduled this week for about 40 hours but on Sunday mb texts that I'm only needed for 8 hours (15 hours payment.) This made me even more upset on top of the sick day issue and admittedly, my texts with her were very short, meaning 'yes, no, okay, etc.'
I came in today and spoke with mb for a minute on the phone then a few seconds when leaving. Db calls me about 5 minutes later asking if everything was okay because mb thinks I was being cold. I was surprised because I didn't say anything rude to her but I guess my negative vibe was obvious. I said everything was fine. He repeatedly was asking. I kept saying everything was fine and I'd talk later.
I was planning on giving 6 weeks notice as I figured that would give employers plenty of time to find a replacement but after the phone call, I don't even know how to see them again without spewing my frustration, and more awkwardness. They are a good family and kind hearted and I'm embarrassed now that my negativity made mb feel bad but I have to do what's best for me financially.
Any advice on how to get over this awkwardness without making it difficult for myself and them to work together for the next few weeks - if they would like. I'm fine If I leave before 6 weeks.
Thank you and I apologize for the long winded post.
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I have spoken with mb previously about scheduling me and then having to cancel a few weeks ago. Her response was along the lines of "if we could pay you for x amount of hours scheduled, we would but if I am canceled on myself, I don't get paid" and we'd just left it at that.
I definitely should not have let my negative feelings affect my communication with them and was in the wrong. All communication with them going forward, I plan on trying to be cordial as possible. As far as burning bridges, not worried if I'm able to use them as a reference or not
There are so many issues with this situation. First, why didn't you find another job when she started changing the schedule after only a month?
Second, if a family is reserving hours by giving you a schedule, they need to pay half time (minimum) if they cancel with less than a week's notice, because you don't have enough time to find something else with such short notice (I might let Thursday and Friday slide if she texted Sunday, but Monday-Wednesday would be at least half time. It makes no difference whether she is paid when something is cancelled; maybe she needs to find a selection of sitters that she can call as needed the day before, when she knows she actually needs them. That or be willing to pay for all reserved hours. With such a varying schedule, I'm wondering why in the world you and she were trying to do a schedule 3-4 months in advance.
Third, you need to advocate for yourself. If you don't like something, you need to say so, let her know why and then let her know whether or not you will go along with it. Stop saying you're fine with the situation being changed constantly when you aren't.
Fourth, there is zero reason for you not to be reimbursed. Forget about the gas, they need to reimburse mileage. And if you take the kids out, whether it's food or activities, the parents should be reimbursing you. It is not the nanny's responsibility to pay for food or activities out of pocket.
Fifth, if you weren't planning on calling in sick, why in the world did you call and give her the opportunity to stay home? If I'm not feeling good but don't intend to take a sick day, I go in. If the parent decides to not have me around the kids, that's their choice, and they will pay full rate for the day, because I'm healthy enough to work. Regardless of whether sick pays are paid or unpaid for you, that was ridiculous of her.
Sixth, by definition, texts are short. On Sunday, yours might have been shorter than normal, but if MB wanted a full conversation, she could have called rather than texting. Now, the conversations that were short are a different story. MB knew something was wrong, DB knew something was wrong, yet you kept saying everything was fine, which it wasn't. The only way a NF-nanny relationship works is with decent communication, and while they haven't been following through, neither have you.
Seventh, you need to change your attitude. Either you want to stay and give them time to find someone else, and if so, you need to think about why you like them. If you don't want to stay that long, give them 2 weeks, but still you need to have a better attitude until you leave.
Eighth (and last, I promise!), find yourself a position that is equitable to both sides. That means you need a contract, and make sure that it covers sick days, cancellations, guaranteed hours, reimbursement for mileage and anything you do with the kids, etc.