Anonymous wrote:OP she is eating all 3 meals at your house to save money buying her own groceries. Even if you had offered to provide lunch, this is abusing that privilege.
I've never had a problem with my nanny and we do provide lunch and snacks. She has a snack, a pice of fruit, a sandwich or frozen dinner for lunch, coffee, water etc. Normal amounts the same as anyone else would eat. My neighbor had a nanny like yours. She was eating 3 meals there even though she only worked for 9 hours a day. It got worse and worse and my neighbor ended up finding out that she was also taking food and other non-food items (paper towels, cleaning stuff) home with her. The funny thing is that the nanny got caught when she accidentally knocked over her tote bag before leaving and a watermelon rolled out of her bag. My neighbor installed a nanny cam and then saw how much stuff she was cooking for herself and hiding in her tote bag.
My advice would be to be direct with her. Tell her that you are fine with her having an occasional snack, having a piece of pizza with the kids, water, coffee, or an occasional treat but that you did not include providing meals for her in your offer. You can then let her know that you would be happy to make some space in the refrigerator for her to bring her lunch.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Im glad you're going to bump up her pay but I am glad you are not my MB. I love feeling as part of a family and honestly is a MB told me I was not welcome to make myself at home, it would not be a good fit for me.
I agree. This would make me feel unwelcome and OP may find herself without a nanny. She sounds like a penny pinching. and If I were the nanny I would feel incredibly ackward.
Anonymous wrote:Im glad you're going to bump up her pay but I am glad you are not my MB. I love feeling as part of a family and honestly is a MB told me I was not welcome to make myself at home, it would not be a good fit for me.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:She may feel entitled if you're underpaying her. What payrate are you giving her? Maybe after paying apartment rent there's no food money? I don't know. Is she overweight?
I pay her 11 dollars an hour to care for my two children which I think is very fair given that she is just CPR certified but has no official nanny training.
She's NOT overweight, she's very thin. That's what makes me think with all of the eggs, bread, and pasta that's going missing she's eating all three meals in my home.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:OP, I am very impressed that you are so open minded and willing to admit you were wrong about the wage. I think your nanny will be happy with the new higher pay and bringing her lunch. Congrats.
+1
Anonymous wrote:OP, I am very impressed that you are so open minded and willing to admit you were wrong about the wage. I think your nanny will be happy with the new higher pay and bringing her lunch. Congrats.
Anonymous wrote:I had not considered that she was eating it out of necessity and honestly I feel really badly.
I discussed it with my DH and he said we can afford to bump her up to 15/hr which seems more standard from what you guys have said and what I've been googling. I do not want her to eat my groceries because she cannot afford any. The wage was what she and I had come up with as fair when she started.
I will offer to pick a few select things up for her but I do not want her eating anything else without permission
Anonymous wrote:OP is being greedy with paying 11/hr and not wanting the nanny to eat her meals at work. Even if the nanny food was costing a $100 (or more) a week, it's still be a steal.
OP, you should be ashamed of yourself. Are your finances really this tight? No vacation this year? Is a nanny really not in the budget?
Come clean here, OP.