Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:My daughter has asthma. We have been taking social distancing very seriously (no camps, social distancing, etc)..
We ask our au pair to limit social Interactions to outside based activities - not to ride in the car with anyone else, not to go inside people’s houses, etc.
We know that she may get tired of this and rematch at some point, which would be really tough, but I can’t put my family at risk because we were worried about Losing childcare.
Maybe it’s your AP, who has been hanging out at our house every weekend since the beginning of the pandemic. Please know that you cannot control your APs. If I were you, I would let the AP go and take care of my children myself.
Anonymous wrote:My daughter has asthma. We have been taking social distancing very seriously (no camps, social distancing, etc)..
We ask our au pair to limit social Interactions to outside based activities - not to ride in the car with anyone else, not to go inside people’s houses, etc.
We know that she may get tired of this and rematch at some point, which would be really tough, but I can’t put my family at risk because we were worried about Losing childcare.
Anonymous wrote:My daughter has asthma. We have been taking social distancing very seriously (no camps, social distancing, etc)..
We ask our au pair to limit social Interactions to outside based activities - not to ride in the car with anyone else, not to go inside people’s houses, etc.
We know that she may get tired of this and rematch at some point, which would be really tough, but I can’t put my family at risk because we were worried about Losing childcare.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Your house, your rules. As long as your family is also social distancing, it's not unfair or hypocritical to ask your AP to do the same. Every family has a different risk tolerance. I would not feel comfortable with a beach trip, especially considering the headlines out of South Carolina/Myrtle Beach becoming a coronavirus petri dish. Depending on your relationship with her, there is always the risk that she will bail to a family with looser rules.
There are more emotionally stable HFs out there, grant her freedom and quit the program.
Anonymous wrote:Your house, your rules. As long as your family is also social distancing, it's not unfair or hypocritical to ask your AP to do the same. Every family has a different risk tolerance. I would not feel comfortable with a beach trip, especially considering the headlines out of South Carolina/Myrtle Beach becoming a coronavirus petri dish. Depending on your relationship with her, there is always the risk that she will bail to a family with looser rules.
Anonymous wrote:I would let our ap go. You have to accept some level
Of risk when you trust your ap to be as responsible as possible when out and about.
If ours wanted go to Vegas or a concert I would have issues, but reasonable outdoor socializing I would accept; even if she had a 90 minute car ride to do it.
Or as PP said; AP can rematch in a heartbeat.