You did the right thing.Anonymous wrote:Op here. We were paying her $18 per hour and she only worked 4.5 hours on the shadow day. We paid her the $80.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:If you're really debating if you should pay this nanny who spent time working for you, I'm not surprised she saw red flags in other areas and quit.
Good luck keeping the next nanny, you should like a terrible employer.
Agreed.
You know what else I wonder about the original post? $80 for the day. The implication from the original post is that the nanny worked an entire day. So 8 hours I would assume. That comes to $10 an hour. Which is low pay for the D.C. area.
So glad the Nanny saw the writing on the wall and left after only one day with this family.
vactryby wrote:Boy, what a tough crowd. What I get lost on is the intent of "shadowing". I didn't think that was "training". I sent my son to his private school, along with others, to "shadow" to determine if that was the right one for him. He didn't have to sit and do the school work, nor was he attributed time for his education. He was considered absent from his normal school.
Hopefully an attorney can chime in, but I believe that unless she filled out tax forms, or has a piece of paper that acknowledges her as an employee, she's not. A day of shadowing is just that. Stand in the corner and watch, taking in information to make that final decision. She shouldn't have been required to lift a finger, and if she did, it was volunteer. However, it wouldn't be worth the $80 argument, just an $80 lesson learned to make it clear for the next one. Just my two pennies....
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I guess technically you have to pay her. But that takes balls to ask you for payment.
I am a doctor, and with my work I usually have a 1/2 day or so when I start a new job that I don't do any work at all. I just get a computer login, figure out how the system works, learn how to do my part of the billing, create note templates, maybe go a meeting, etc. I always get paid for that time. However, if I just did that, then quit later that day, I would not expect to get paid. If I did, I would consider it a pleasant surprise. I certainly wouldn't call and ask for my payment for those hours.
You aren't doing any portion of your job (seeing to patients) during those hours. A shadow day is more akin to on-the-job training, which is paid.
Well by your logic then nanny didn't do any portion of her job since her job is to take care of the children while mom goes to work, a shadow day means mom is at home training nanny so therefor nanny should not be paid, per your logic.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Call an agency, any agency and they will tell you of course a shadow day is paid. You people are nuts. Pay peanuts, you get monkeys. Good luck changing nannies every 6 months because you arent decent employers.
I like that! "You pay peanuts, you get monkeys" should be the official motto of this board.
Anonymous wrote:Call an agency, any agency and they will tell you of course a shadow day is paid. You people are nuts. Pay peanuts, you get monkeys. Good luck changing nannies every 6 months because you arent decent employers.
Anonymous wrote:"A shadow day is just what it says it is, as vactryby stated, and a training day is a training day."
You're getting too caught up on the term. The OP clearly stated the nanny worked. She should be paid. When someone takes time out of their day for an employer, they should be paid.
BTW, you don't forfeit pay when you don't give enough notice. You might forfeit FUTURE pay, but not pay for work that has already been done. That's illegal.
Anonymous wrote:If you're really debating if you should pay this nanny who spent time working for you, I'm not surprised she saw red flags in other areas and quit.
Good luck keeping the next nanny, you should like a terrible employer.