Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:OP here: It all boils down to respect for me as an employee. If I got sick days I have no problem dealing with large amounts of vomit and diarrhea. I wouldn't have been complaining nearly as much. I am human and I think I deserve to say geeze this sucks and I wish I got sick days like most normal people get with their jobs. I have no problem with coming in with just about any illness under the sun when I am being paid if I catch their bug.
I'm glad I read the entire thread before responding b/c I had an entirely different response in my head until I came to this post.
OP: It sounds like your real issue is the lack of sick days. That's understandable. It's also something that can be addressed...unlike expecting your doctor MB to cancel her patients to stay home with a sick child. Like some others I would be irritated if my doctor canceled on me for anything less than an emergency (due to the difficulty of getting the appointment in the first place at some offices).
If you have an anniversary coming up with them you could bring it up at annual review time. I think it's very reasonable to ask for some sick days to be added as a benefit. Even if you don't have an anniversary coming up I think you should schedule a time to talk about it. Explain that you are happy to take care of their kids when they are sick but are concerned about the possibility of catching their illness and needing to take unpaid time off to recuperate. Put the ball in their court by asking if they have any thoughts or ideas on how to address this concern. Explain that your concern isn't related to catching a cold or other minor illness, but rather related to being exposed to and catching a stomach virus b/c you don't want to be in a position of having to choose between coming to work when you are vomiting or losing out on a day's pay due to a stomach virus you caught while cleaning up vomit at their house. You're a f/t nanny, and I think it's reasonable to ask for some sick days based on your f/t employment status.
Anonymous wrote:Why resort to personal attacks when someone actually points out how a professional relationship works? I am completely in favor of nannies getting PTO and sick leave (and offer generous paid leave to my own nanny). I am having a hard time understanding why nannies who want to be treated as professionals can't act like professionals when it comes to advocating for their own self-interests and negotiating contracts.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Why resort to personal attacks when someone actually points out how a professional relationship works? I am completely in favor of nannies getting PTO and sick leave (and offer generous paid leave to my own nanny). I am having a hard time understanding why nannies who want to be treated as professionals can't act like professionals when it comes to advocating for their own self-interests and negotiating contracts.
Are you the same gem saying the the $25-$30/ hr nanny is over-paid?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Why resort to personal attacks when someone actually points out how a professional relationship works? I am completely in favor of nannies getting PTO and sick leave (and offer generous paid leave to my own nanny). I am having a hard time understanding why nannies who want to be treated as professionals can't act like professionals when it comes to advocating for their own self-interests and negotiating contracts.
Are you the same gem saying the the $25-$30/ hr nanny is over-paid?
Anonymous wrote:
Actually we are talking about nannies who accept this situation, including OP. I don't disagree that parents should offer paid sick leave but at the end of the day, you have no one but yourself to blame if you TAKE a job that does not offer paid sick leave. If you want it, ASK for it. NEGOTIATE for it. Or find a job that offers it. Not going to work when a kiddo is sick because you don't have it, especially when you never asked for it in the first place, is the best way to get yourself replaced. Nannies want to be treated like professionals so act like them and negotiate the contracts you want. That's how it works in every other professional field.
YES! This is exactly right.
Actually we are talking about nannies who accept this situation, including OP. I don't disagree that parents should offer paid sick leave but at the end of the day, you have no one but yourself to blame if you TAKE a job that does not offer paid sick leave. If you want it, ASK for it. NEGOTIATE for it. Or find a job that offers it. Not going to work when a kiddo is sick because you don't have it, especially when you never asked for it in the first place, is the best way to get yourself replaced. Nannies want to be treated like professionals so act like them and negotiate the contracts you want. That's how it works in every other professional field.
Anonymous wrote:Why resort to personal attacks when someone actually points out how a professional relationship works? I am completely in favor of nannies getting PTO and sick leave (and offer generous paid leave to my own nanny). I am having a hard time understanding why nannies who want to be treated as professionals can't act like professionals when it comes to advocating for their own self-interests and negotiating contracts.