Anonymous wrote:So you basically called in sick on your first day of work and asked to be paid for it?
Yeah. Sorry, OP, you deserve to be fired. The mother is lying about staying home - she’s interviewing nannies today.
How old are you, OP? Just curious.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I just started a new nanny position last week, I had two trial shifts which were great. The family notified me I could "borrow" my sick time if needed. We hadn't signed a contract yet but were due to do so today. They had sent me a copy of the contract which worked great and had a generous amount of sick and paid leave.
This morning I woke up sick and texted them 20 minutes before I was supposed to start and asked if I could "borrow" my sick time for today.
I received a text a few hours later that the mom had decided to quit her job and stay home. She said they've had such difficulty with reliable childcare and is going to have her mom come in and help.
Ok, fine, whatever lady. But I still think it's a little harsh to fire me for missing one day or trying to access benefits that she had promised?!
You started last week with two trial shifts and you called in sick on your first real day? I would have fired you, too.
Should she have showed up sick?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:She was looking for a reason. Don’t take it personally.
I interviewed for a position where a mom (surgeon) fired two nannies within the last 6 weeks.
One nanny fired for calling in sick. One nanny fired for coming sick. Can’t win with crazy.
Mom is a surgeon so she needs reliable child care. Her job depends on her child care. If she cannot work, someone misses their appointments or needed surgery. If Mom gets sick, she cannot do her job.
Ohhhhhhhh I just realized this was a bumped thread from Feb 2020. Hopefully OP is feeling better now.Anonymous wrote:what happened a few days later?Anonymous wrote:This thread aged interestingly considering what happened a few days later.
what happened a few days later?Anonymous wrote:This thread aged interestingly considering what happened a few days later.
Anonymous wrote:She was looking for a reason. Don’t take it personally.
I interviewed for a position where a mom (surgeon) fired two nannies within the last 6 weeks.
One nanny fired for calling in sick. One nanny fired for coming sick. Can’t win with crazy.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I just started a new nanny position last week, I had two trial shifts which were great. The family notified me I could "borrow" my sick time if needed. We hadn't signed a contract yet but were due to do so today. They had sent me a copy of the contract which worked great and had a generous amount of sick and paid leave.
This morning I woke up sick and texted them 20 minutes before I was supposed to start and asked if I could "borrow" my sick time for today.
I received a text a few hours later that the mom had decided to quit her job and stay home. She said they've had such difficulty with reliable childcare and is going to have her mom come in and help.
Ok, fine, whatever lady. But I still think it's a little harsh to fire me for missing one day or trying to access benefits that she had promised?!
You started last week with two trial shifts and you called in sick on your first real day? I would have fired you, too.
Anonymous wrote:Frankly, this family is so lucky OP called out sick and got fired. Based on all her posts, they have saved themselves a lot of drama down the road.