Anonymous wrote:Your post is pretty messy OP, but assuming I'm reading it correctly I would err on the generous side of notice, especially during the holiday season.
I would tell her now and pay her through the end of the year.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I'm a bit confused here, you have a nanny who is leaving to stay home with her child, yet you don't know how much notice to allow.
Didn't she give you the notice...??
Sorry, just mighty confused here.
Read the original post again and again and again....
Anonymous wrote:I'm a bit confused here, you have a nanny who is leaving to stay home with her child, yet you don't know how much notice to allow.
Didn't she give you the notice...??
Sorry, just mighty confused here.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:2 weeks is pretty inconsiderate...ESPECIALLY during the holidays. Would you want her to give you 2 weeks or a month?
But the whole point is that OP wants to stay home with her baby. To keep the nanny longer means the OP is basically waiting around to take care of her own child. That makes no sense.
OP hired this person with the understanding that it would be a longterm position. The nanny could have turned down a longer lasting position in order to work for OP, only to be slapped in the face by being given 2 weeks notice at Christmas time.
Nobody is saying OP shouldn't stay home with the baby. She has a responsibility to the person she hired.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:2 weeks is pretty inconsiderate...ESPECIALLY during the holidays. Would you want her to give you 2 weeks or a month?
But the whole point is that OP wants to stay home with her baby. To keep the nanny longer means the OP is basically waiting around to take care of her own child. That makes no sense.
Anonymous wrote:2 weeks is pretty inconsiderate...ESPECIALLY during the holidays. Would you want her to give you 2 weeks or a month?
Anonymous wrote:2 weeks is pretty inconsiderate...ESPECIALLY during the holidays. Would you want her to give you 2 weeks or a month?