Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I am unfamiliar with the concept that an au pair can perform “household chores.” I thought that they can only do child-related chores (laundry for child, wash child’s dishes).
An up pair cannot perform household chores as part of her on duty work. However, the program says they can perform household chores as a member of the household. So she should never be expected to clean a whole house, but can be expected to vacuum or the empty dishwasher.
An equitable split of household chores between all adults is allowed.
So in a one-parent house you could have the au pair do half of the chores? Really?
As far as I can tell, yes they could do half of the HOUSEHOLD chores (AP does for herself and kids, HP does for themselves), if the kids are young enough to not be helping at all. In a two parent home, 1/3 would be equitable. That’s how a lot of people split cooking/clean up: one cooks, one washes pans by hand, the other loads the dishwasher.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I am unfamiliar with the concept that an au pair can perform “household chores.” I thought that they can only do child-related chores (laundry for child, wash child’s dishes).
An up pair cannot perform household chores as part of her on duty work. However, the program says they can perform household chores as a member of the household. So she should never be expected to clean a whole house, but can be expected to vacuum or the empty dishwasher.
An equitable split of household chores between all adults is allowed.
So in a one-parent house you could have the au pair do half of the chores? Really?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I am unfamiliar with the concept that an au pair can perform “household chores.” I thought that they can only do child-related chores (laundry for child, wash child’s dishes).
An up pair cannot perform household chores as part of her on duty work. However, the program says they can perform household chores as a member of the household. So she should never be expected to clean a whole house, but can be expected to vacuum or the empty dishwasher.
An equitable split of household chores between all adults is allowed.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I am unfamiliar with the concept that an au pair can perform “household chores.” I thought that they can only do child-related chores (laundry for child, wash child’s dishes).
An up pair cannot perform household chores as part of her on duty work. However, the program says they can perform household chores as a member of the household. So she should never be expected to clean a whole house, but can be expected to vacuum or the empty dishwasher.
Anonymous wrote:I am unfamiliar with the concept that an au pair can perform “household chores.” I thought that they can only do child-related chores (laundry for child, wash child’s dishes).
Anonymous wrote:Very longtime HM here (on year 12). I would both never intentionally leave a coffee cup for AP to put in dishwasher AND find it incredibly petty if for some reason a cup were left inadvertently and AP didn't deal with it.