Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:You pay her for snow days, federal holidays and when you go on vacation. Not hard to figure out, OP. Guaranteed hours means the hours as well as the time/days of those hours is guaranteed. She makes herself available to you on those hours and days and you pay for it.
OP here. You’re message is rude and condescending.
We haven’t talked about guaranteed hours yet and she’s left early on me some days for her other afternoon job. I have a flex situation right now and have been ok with her leaving when the other kid has off of school and their parents want more hours. I wasn’t sure if I should be setting this up more formally with guaranteed hours and paying on snow/fed/vacation days. Sorry for asking for advice...
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:You also want to guarantee her hours. That means if you take vacation, she can come in and do a few things (collect mail, make sure kid laundry is done, switch seasonal clothes, reorganize playroom), but she gets paid for all hours, regardless of how long the tasks take. Depending on the situation, she may even shop for you.
You will never keep a good nanny doing this!!
Anonymous wrote:We pay our PT nanny for snow days, holidays that fall on one of her workdays, and give her 2 weeks PTO. Oh, and we also pay he when we go on vacation, or otherwise cancel on her (sick kid, etc.)
Anonymous wrote:You pay her for snow days, federal holidays and when you go on vacation. Not hard to figure out, OP. Guaranteed hours means the hours as well as the time/days of those hours is guaranteed. She makes herself available to you on those hours and days and you pay for it.
Anonymous wrote:You also want to guarantee her hours. That means if you take vacation, she can come in and do a few things (collect mail, make sure kid laundry is done, switch seasonal clothes, reorganize playroom), but she gets paid for all hours, regardless of how long the tasks take. Depending on the situation, she may even shop for you.
eAnonymous wrote:Make sure you follow OPM guidelines and not school guidelines for closure otherwise you'll be paying her for a ton of days not worked.
Anonymous wrote:You also want to guarantee her hours. That means if you take vacation, she can come in and do a few things (collect mail, make sure kid laundry is done, switch seasonal clothes, reorganize playroom), but she gets paid for all hours, regardless of how long the tasks take. Depending on the situation, she may even shop for you.