Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:30 minutes is not an entire schedule change.
Will you be paying her for that additional time?
Does she have a very long commute?
Does she rely on public transportation?
Hi, thanks everyone. I am NOT asking her to work extra, I am just asking to come earlier and leave earlier. She has her own car and her commute is about 25-30 min. She worked from 7am at her previous family, so I didn't think this would be a problem. Also, her explanation is " it is way too early, I can't" is very frustrating.
Interesting. There are lots of potential solutions here and many nannies have a busy early morning getting the children out (7-9am), rest a bit, get preschoolers out or after regular school. 'You could make it clear she can nap later in the day.
But really, sounds like be a mismatch for you both. not a big deal
Anonymous wrote:I'm a nanny and some of these replies are ridiculous. Jobs change over the years, you need to learn be flexible if you want to stay in a job long term.
I've been with my nanny family for just over 5 years. When I first started my start time was 9:30. It was like that for almost 2 years. Then my DB got a new job and had to leave the house really early in the morning, so my start time changed to 8. It was 8 for about a year and then my charges were starting preschool. We would to leave the house at 8 to get there on time, so my start time changed to 7:30. My end time has also changed with each of these changes so that I wasn't working too many hours.
During all of these changes I sat down with my employers and we had a discussion about the new needs and figured out a new schedule that worked. I used to love my 9:30 start time, but that's not what they need anymore. I've also been flexible with my duties and taken on more household manager type stuff as the kids have grown and needed less.
Guess what? Here I am in a job 5 years later that I love. My employers treat me like gold. They thank me every day for helping to make their lives run better. My charges are now in school full time and I'm still getting paid the same amount of money, no cut in hours. So many of you these days are always complaining about every little thing and forget that this is a service industry. Being flexible and adapting to changes in your job is the key to being able to stay in a job long term.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:30 minutes is not an entire schedule change.
Will you be paying her for that additional time?
Does she have a very long commute?
Does she rely on public transportation?
maybe she could stay at your place Monday -thursday evenings?
Anonymous wrote:I have a feeling that OP has taken advantage of her nanny many times and this was the last straw.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:30 minutes is not an entire schedule change.
Will you be paying her for that additional time?
Does she have a very long commute?
Does she rely on public transportation?
Hi, thanks everyone. I am NOT asking her to work extra, I am just asking to come earlier and leave earlier. She has her own car and her commute is about 25-30 min. She worked from 7am at her previous family, so I didn't think this would be a problem. Also, her explanation is " it is way too early, I can't" is very frustrating.
Anonymous wrote:30 minutes is not an entire schedule change.
Will you be paying her for that additional time?
Does she have a very long commute?
Does she rely on public transportation?
Anonymous wrote:Talk to her again - tell her that she must come in this 30 minutes earlier or you need to find someone else.
Job requirements change. We have had to let a brilliant and beloved nanny of two years go because she was unable to travel with us. When she was hired, traveling with us was not a part of her job but our needs changed and DH and I must travel for our company. Nanny understood completely and is still very much a part of our lives.
Things change.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:She accepted position with a start time that is acceptable and convenient to her personal life. Maybe she has other things that she must do and coming in earlier means she is inconvenienced. OP, et AL, would have a fit if nanny suddenly told you--not asked-- but told you that she had to come in earlier. Fire her so she can find a Job working for someone who does not look upon her as a slave to kowtow to your every whim.
Youve clearly never had a real job before, have you? Note that OP's boss is now requiring her to be at work earlier. Does she throw a fit, say no, and quit? No, she does the job.
OP is your nanny very young? I can't imagine a mature adult making a big deal out of this.
And this is why some blue collar workers will neber be white collar professionals. They just dont get it.
Id interview for a new nanny.
So being a doormat makes a nanny a white collar professional?
That is not being a doormat, Dear, that is simply being employed - in any profession and in any job. Nanny included.