Anonymous wrote:I had a friend who truly needed that level of flexibility.
The answer was two nannies. One 40 hour a week professional nanny and one evening nanny they paid to be on call every week day evening.
The agreement was the nanny - who was really a high school girl - would show up at my friend's house by 6pm every day. She would then stay until the parents came home usually no later than 9:30 pm. If the parents showed up before 6 or anytime after, they sent the nanny home but they still paid her for the hours she would have worked and she still had to show up at 6 even if the parents were home or they planned to arrive shortly thereafter. (not sure why this was - maybe just for sake of continuity?)
Anonymous wrote:Current ad on DCUM Nanny Wanted:
"Flexibility in schedule and ability to adjust hours as needed."
Translation:
Parent to Nanny at 9:30pm on a Friday evening:
"I know you thought we'd be home by 7pm, but something came up."
Do they really think a nanny should have no other commitments/responsibilities?
Really? What planet do these parents come from?
Can someone please explain this nonsense? Thank you.
I'd love for the parent who wrote that to respond, but not holding my breath for that.
Anonymous wrote:If you want someone to be available for hours that span well beyond their regular schedule you should expect to either pay for reserving that time or recognize that it is not reserved. I get what you're saying completely OP. So many families turn to nanny care because they need flexibility that daycare doesn't offer. They then get sticker shock when they see how much it costs and they try to cut corners. They advertise for a 40 hour schedule and say they need flexibility, then they think they can show up whenever and it's okay. 24 hour nannies are expensive. Nannies with constant availability are expensive. Live-in nannies are NOT 24 hour, constantly available nannies.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I used to work for a family that needed a flexible nanny and was not all like what you describe. I was always given 24 hrs notice if my hours were going to be changed. There were many times I said I couldn't do it and suffered no repercussions. But, they also paid a premium for the other 90% of the Times I did do a schedule change
Sounds ok if they pay you for it.
I should have entitled this thread:
"Crazy things parents want for FREE"
Anonymous wrote:I used to work for a family that needed a flexible nanny and was not all like what you describe. I was always given 24 hrs notice if my hours were going to be changed. There were many times I said I couldn't do it and suffered no repercussions. But, they also paid a premium for the other 90% of the Times I did do a schedule change