Anonymous wrote:It has been nearly a year and our nanny has not taken any sick days or PTO. What is the protocol? Do we give her an additional check at the year mark for the personal-time-off that she never used?
Anonymous wrote:There's no standard, but you need to address this directly.
The three options are
1) roll over pto to next year
2) pay out pto
3) lose pto (definitely would not spring this on her last minute! But it is an option for a contract when you wish to encourage pto to be used)
At this point, you need to discuss which option you will use and put it in writing ongoing.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:There's no standard, but you need to address this directly.
The three options are
1) roll over pto to next year
2) pay out pto
3) lose pto (definitely would not spring this on her last minute! But it is an option for a contract when you wish to encourage pto to be used)
At this point, you need to discuss which option you will use and put it in writing ongoing.
This is a terrible option! You are basically punishing her for never inconveniencing you.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:There's no standard, but you need to address this directly.
The three options are
1) roll over pto to next year
2) pay out pto
3) lose pto (definitely would not spring this on her last minute! But it is an option for a contract when you wish to encourage pto to be used)
At this point, you need to discuss which option you will use and put it in writing ongoing.
This is a terrible option! You are basically punishing her for never inconveniencing you.
Anonymous wrote:There's no standard, but you need to address this directly.
The three options are
1) roll over pto to next year
2) pay out pto
3) lose pto (definitely would not spring this on her last minute! But it is an option for a contract when you wish to encourage pto to be used)
At this point, you need to discuss which option you will use and put it in writing ongoing.