Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:You have a contract that states four days a week. You cannot (or should not) fire her if she refuses to change her contract.
Um, yes you can "fire" her if she can't do five days a week. It wouldn't really be a firing, it would be a letting her go due to schedule conflicts. Nothing wrong with that as long as you give her the standard 2 weeks. Also, if you live in an "at will" state like VA then she can be let go for any reason.
Your attitude will have nannies working in a revolving door. This nanny has been with her charge for three years. If not legally wrong, it is morally wrong to let a good nanny go because the employer’s schedule changed.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:You have a contract that states four days a week. You cannot (or should not) fire her if she refuses to change her contract.
I doubt their contract is valid for an indefinite period of time. OP can offer the nanny the new position, with different hours. The nanny can accept or decline.
My contract is![]()
OP is having a new baby. Changing hours is just the tip of the iceberg. Sounds like you need to sit nanny down and see if she’s still interested (I know I wouldn’t be!), and if so, renegotiate pay, hours, and duties.
Well, it wouldn’t matter if you would be interested because your boss has to keep your hours and duties exactly the same for as long as you’d like to continue working for them, no matter if their needs change, right? ?????
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:You have a contract that states four days a week. You cannot (or should not) fire her if she refuses to change her contract.
I doubt their contract is valid for an indefinite period of time. OP can offer the nanny the new position, with different hours. The nanny can accept or decline.
My contract is![]()
OP is having a new baby. Changing hours is just the tip of the iceberg. Sounds like you need to sit nanny down and see if she’s still interested (I know I wouldn’t be!), and if so, renegotiate pay, hours, and duties.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:You have a contract that states four days a week. You cannot (or should not) fire her if she refuses to change her contract.
I doubt their contract is valid for an indefinite period of time. OP can offer the nanny the new position, with different hours. The nanny can accept or decline.
Anonymous wrote:Newsflash: OP's job likely requires different hours now. OP can accept the new hours, or look for a new job.
The same goes for OP's nanny.
Anonymous wrote:You have a contract that states four days a week. You cannot (or should not) fire her if she refuses to change her contract.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Employer here. I would be wrong to terminate a nanny because she was unable to work an additional day that she was never contracted to work. Legally, it is fine but morally and ethically wrong to fire someone who has been caring for your child well for three years.
I am honestly shocked this is even being debated.
NO ONE IS SAYING TO FIRE HER. Everyone is saying that the family should offer her the extra day first, and if she can't do it, then they have to figure out if it will work out to keep her. The OP didn't say if the nanny is currently working part time, or a full 40 hours, or if the new schedule would change the hours as well.
I can't believe it's a debate that if a family's needs change, and the nanny can't meet the new schedule, the family might not be able to keep the nanny on. Her job is going to end sometime, anyway.