Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I have to state upfront OP that finding a plan for back-up childcare is not your nanny's responsibility at all.
That responsibility lies on YOU and you alone.
That being said, I totally understand your frustration.
Honestly I would be so done w/her.
For her to take so much time off, leaving you high + dry w/out childcare is definitely a nanny deal-breaker.
She's not taking her position seriously & seems to be taking your kind-heartedness for granted.
I would give her her walking papers and find a more reliable + responsible nanny who values your family enough to make a decent effort in her employment w/you.
Her problems shouldn't be yours as well.
Good luck!
Finding backup care in a traditional situation wouldn't be the nanny's responsibility, but when she's already taken off almost a month of work over half a year? It is beyond excessive. She should be trying to make this easier on the family
0P, I agree this is not the right relationship for either of you and you need to move on
I respectfully disagree.
In ANY nanny situation, why would it ever be left up to the nanny to provide back-up childcare for her nanny family....??!
Since we are talking about the family's children, it is solely left to the parents to seek a back-up childcare plan.
This nanny sounds irresponsible, undependable, flaky & lacks a good work ethic overall.
I would never in a million years let her find a suitable replacement nanny for my child!
Anonymous wrote:I don't see how this is sustainable OP. I think you need to replace her. You can tell her this and see if she can work something else out, but you can't go on like this.
Just tell her that you are truly sorry, but you cannot accommodate the level of time she needs off. So unless she can make other arrangements such that she is able to fulfill the full-time position you offer, then you will need to find someone else.
It's hard, but it's the reality. Rare are the jobs where this wouldn't be a problem.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I have to state upfront OP that finding a plan for back-up childcare is not your nanny's responsibility at all.
That responsibility lies on YOU and you alone.
That being said, I totally understand your frustration.
Honestly I would be so done w/her.
For her to take so much time off, leaving you high + dry w/out childcare is definitely a nanny deal-breaker.
She's not taking her position seriously & seems to be taking your kind-heartedness for granted.
I would give her her walking papers and find a more reliable + responsible nanny who values your family enough to make a decent effort in her employment w/you.
Her problems shouldn't be yours as well.
Good luck!
Finding backup care in a traditional situation wouldn't be the nanny's responsibility, but when she's already taken off almost a month of work over half a year? It is beyond excessive. She should be trying to make this easier on the family
0P, I agree this is not the right relationship for either of you and you need to move on
Anonymous wrote:You need to replace her. I would never ever have tolerated this. Once you use up your paid time off, it needs to be a 911-style emergency to get unpaid time off.
Anonymous wrote:I have to state upfront OP that finding a plan for back-up childcare is not your nanny's responsibility at all.
That responsibility lies on YOU and you alone.
That being said, I totally understand your frustration.
Honestly I would be so done w/her.
For her to take so much time off, leaving you high + dry w/out childcare is definitely a nanny deal-breaker.
She's not taking her position seriously & seems to be taking your kind-heartedness for granted.
I would give her her walking papers and find a more reliable + responsible nanny who values your family enough to make a decent effort in her employment w/you.
Her problems shouldn't be yours as well.
Good luck!