Anonymous wrote:FFCRA requires the nanny to be paid her regular salary for up to two weeks of paid sick leave for exactly this situation.
Anonymous wrote:False positives don't happen. Sounds like the second test was a false negative. She had covid one month ago, so you are likely in the clear now. Was she ever symptomatic?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:You’ve worked for them for 10 years and she telling you you will not be paid if you quarantine for 10-14 because she tested positive? That is not ok. She should absolutely pay you, self quarantine and then get tested again.
What would happen if the roles were reversed? Would she expect you to continue working if you were positive? If not, would that be time off unpaid? COVID is very much so still alive and it will be months until a vaccine is available and that still doesn’t prevent you from getting it. With that said, you all should have a conversation about COVID moving forward. [/quote
I was briefly exposed a few months ago to someone that was being tested for Covid. Out of an abundance of caution and knowing that her elderly parents were visiting, I let her know so she could make that decision. She told me to stay home and I had to use my vacation time to cover it.
I agree and asked to speak several times to update our contract to avoid situations like the one I’m in now. That discussion never happened.
I think in this case specifically, the MB should pay for her nanny to quarantine because she is the one that has COVID— she’s the reason nanny has been exposed.
Anonymous wrote:False positives don't happen. Sounds like the second test was a false negative. She had covid one month ago, so you are likely in the clear now. Was she ever symptomatic?
Anonymous wrote:You’ve worked for them for 10 years and she telling you you will not be paid if you quarantine for 10-14 because she tested positive? That is not ok. She should absolutely pay you, self quarantine and then get tested again.
What would happen if the roles were reversed? Would she expect you to continue working if you were positive? If not, would that be time off unpaid? COVID is very much so still alive and it will be months until a vaccine is available and that still doesn’t prevent you from getting it. With that said, you all should have a conversation about COVID moving forward. [/quote
I was briefly exposed a few months ago to someone that was being tested for Covid. Out of an abundance of caution and knowing that her elderly parents were visiting, I let her know so she could make that decision. She told me to stay home and I had to use my vacation time to cover it.
I agree and asked to speak several times to update our contract to avoid situations like the one I’m in now. That discussion never happened.
Anonymous wrote:False positives don't happen. Sounds like the second test was a false negative. She had covid one month ago, so you are likely in the clear now. Was she ever symptomatic?