Anonymous wrote:I'd have her use that time to run errands or clean the kids' rooms, sort through clothing to remove outgrown things, changing sheets, etc. I don't know why she can't do simple meal prep--cutting up vegetables or starting something in the slow cooker is easy enough.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Errands perhaps? An hour a day really isn't that much time to fill.
Sorry, I didn't explain it well -- it's two days a week and approximately 2.5 hours each of those two days.
We just don't have that many errands. We do grocery delivery and dry cleaning maybe once every other week. I wish there were more, that would be an optimal solution.
You are so cheap that you are worried about 5 hours of down time? I hope she reads this and starts looking for a new job and finds one.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Errands perhaps? An hour a day really isn't that much time to fill.
Sorry, I didn't explain it well -- it's two days a week and approximately 2.5 hours each of those two days.
We just don't have that many errands. We do grocery delivery and dry cleaning maybe once every other week. I wish there were more, that would be an optimal solution.
Anonymous wrote:We are about to sign our yearly contract with our nanny. Beginning in January, she will have two days where both kids are in preschool at the same time, leaving her with about 5 hours of downtime total. How do others handle this situation? We need her for preschool dropoff so we can't just adjust her hours to make them later on those two days. Ideally, she'd maybe do some pickup and some adult laundry (she only does kids laundry right now). Meal prep is off the table (she can't cook). Or do we just give her those 5 hours to do whatever she wants? That doesn't seem entirely useful or fair. I'd like to find some suggestions that have worked for both parties so we can offer them to her and get her feedback. Thanks!
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Errands perhaps? An hour a day really isn't that much time to fill.
Sorry, I didn't explain it well -- it's two days a week and approximately 2.5 hours each of those two days.
We just don't have that many errands. We do grocery delivery and dry cleaning maybe once every other week. I wish there were more, that would be an optimal solution.
Anonymous wrote:Errands perhaps? An hour a day really isn't that much time to fill.
Anonymous wrote:Errands perhaps? An hour a day really isn't that much time to fill.