Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Ask her if she can please come 5-10 minutes early, and see what she says... and does.
You have to pay for that. I hate people who think they can just ask nanny to come 10 minutes early and pay the same rate. That extra 10 minutes is equal to an hour of overtime or I quit.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I am a person who HATES to be late for anything, yet I encounter weeks where I am just late for EVERYTHING, despite my attempts to leave early (or at the same time as usual). It just happens and I feel awful every time.
Unless this is something that has been going on consistently for a while, maybe chalk it up to a fluke. Remind her that she needs to be on time and go from there. She is likely aware of the fact that she is late and is probably embarrassed about it.
Including your job? That just isn't ok. No employer should be expected to put up with that. A day here and there - sure. A day day because of a traffic nightmare - sure. But weeks of lateness just because? Not ok.
Of course that is how it would be read on this site. Geez, people really do just think everyone is the worst. I meant weeks here and there, not weeks at a time. And yes, I realize employers should not have to "put up with" 3-4 minutes of tardiness consistently, but there are just times that it seems to happen a few days in a row. Fortunately, I work for people who are understanding of the human condition (I am no longer a nanny), and don't flip out over a few minutes.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I am a person who HATES to be late for anything, yet I encounter weeks where I am just late for EVERYTHING, despite my attempts to leave early (or at the same time as usual). It just happens and I feel awful every time.
Unless this is something that has been going on consistently for a while, maybe chalk it up to a fluke. Remind her that she needs to be on time and go from there. She is likely aware of the fact that she is late and is probably embarrassed about it.
Including your job? That just isn't ok. No employer should be expected to put up with that. A day here and there - sure. A day day because of a traffic nightmare - sure. But weeks of lateness just because? Not ok.
Anonymous wrote:I am a person who HATES to be late for anything, yet I encounter weeks where I am just late for EVERYTHING, despite my attempts to leave early (or at the same time as usual). It just happens and I feel awful every time.
Unless this is something that has been going on consistently for a while, maybe chalk it up to a fluke. Remind her that she needs to be on time and go from there. She is likely aware of the fact that she is late and is probably embarrassed about it.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Our nanny, who was very punctual when she started with us, is now late at least 10 minutes and often much more every day. How do I broach this with her in a way that won't create resentment? We really like her otherwise.
I give to my boss 15 minutes everyday,but she's always come home late and never pay me for that and never say sorry,I thinking very serious to liave them,why I got early there and they never coming on time?
Anonymous wrote:Our nanny, who was very punctual when she started with us, is now late at least 10 minutes and often much more every day. How do I broach this with her in a way that won't create resentment? We really like her otherwise.
Anonymous wrote:Ask her if she can please come 5-10 minutes early, and see what she says... and does.