Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:And my duties have changed too.
Basically I’m a housekeeper, errand runner and chauffeur. That’s not the job I signed up for. I signed up to be their infants nanny and pick up the 4-year-old from preschool. Minimal household duties. Now I’m no longer responsible for baby but fill my time doing dishes, laundry and grocery shopping before picking up 4-year-old.
I told my employer I didn’t agree to this and cited my contract and he was like, “yeah that’s based on our needs at the time, our needs have changed”.
He is within his rights to do that, or even eliminate the job. He's being an asshole about it, though. The right way was to sit you down, tell you your job was ending, give you two weeks notice, and then offer you the first right of refusal for the new job. You'd have been equally SOL and upset, but that would have been the professional way to go about it.
Anonymous wrote:And my duties have changed too.
Basically I’m a housekeeper, errand runner and chauffeur. That’s not the job I signed up for. I signed up to be their infants nanny and pick up the 4-year-old from preschool. Minimal household duties. Now I’m no longer responsible for baby but fill my time doing dishes, laundry and grocery shopping before picking up 4-year-old.
I told my employer I didn’t agree to this and cited my contract and he was like, “yeah that’s based on our needs at the time, our needs have changed”.
Anonymous wrote:So they aren't giving you your guaranteed hours? If not, you can just quit--they're in breach of contract.
Anonymous wrote:People suck...I would look for another job and quit when the new job starts. I wouldn’t even worry about giving notice since they didn’t worry about adhering to the contract. At this point you owe them nothing more than a goodbye wave when you leave.