Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:I think at all depends on a number of things. However, I would hope that if the HF did everything "right" such as send a handbook in advance of au pair's arrival, go over the rules, try to talk to the Au Pair multiple times and look for improvement, etc., and then initiate rematch, that the agency would try to discern suitable versus unsuitable candidates for being Au Pairs. Some host families don't explain the rules, but we did. However, the rematch document stated "mismatch of childcare expectations". Our rules were clear. We ended up leaving the program. It was not worth our stress level---we have enough of that at work.
Just wondering. Would you mind sharing what your AP did that she did not agree was unsafe (and perhaps the prevrious famiky-since she did with them and they did not rematch- or did they not know...)? Do you think in this case, it was a cultural issue about the perception of what is safe? I.e.- that our expectations are higher here in the USA than in most of our APs home countries?
^sorry, this is meant for above pp, if she reads this.
Maybe you were asking me ...
We had a baby about 4-5 months old at the time. We instructed her not to sleep with our baby. AP was told to put the baby in the crib on her back for naps. The AP loved to cuddle my baby like a doll. She repeatedly slept with my baby on the sofa. She would lie down on the edge of the sofa. Baby was between her and the sofa back and cushions. We told her that the baby can suffocate, especially if AP fell asleep herself. This action is unsafe for a 4-5 months old. The agency also told her it is considered unsafe and to stop doing this. AP insisted that nothing bad ever happened when she did the same thing before. I told the AP that she was lucky that the previous HK didn't suffocate and die on her watch. I know for a fact that the 1st HK was also an infant, from the extension report. I found the AP doing it again after the agency and I told her to stop.
Regardless whether it is a general practice or not in the AP home country, when the HP (and the agency) tells an AP not to do something because of a safety concern, it does not matter what the AP's opinion or previous experience has been, the AP should follow the instructions and stop doing it. There was no misunderstanding or misinterpretation when the agency and I both told her to stop this action.
The last straw was finding my baby on the AP bed (AP was not allowed to bring the baby into AP room in the first place) with a pillow on top of my baby (my baby was face up lying on her back) while the AP was on the other side of the room sorting things on the floor and not paying attention to the baby on the bed. At 4-5 months old, the pillow was bigger than my baby. I documented with an email stating what I saw (after I immediately removed my baby from the room of course) and she replied that she was sorry for what she did (thereby acknowledging and agreeing that what I described did happen).
By the way, after this AP left, I found out from the LCC that the 1st HF did try to go into rematch but withdrew the request after the AP begged them not to send her to rematch. When this happened with us, the AP begged us too to keep her but we said no. I think that this AP was hoping we were like the 1st HF and take back the rematch request, too. We don't know why the 1st HF tried to rematch, if it was over this type of issue or something else. I do not know if the 1st HF knew this AP was sleeping with their baby like this. There were no official notes of 1st HF requesting and then withdrawing the rematch request in the extension or rematch file. If the LCC was tighter lipped, we would never have known.