Are your children’s vaccines up to date?

Set a reminder

Please or to access all these features

Paid childcare

Discuss everything related to paid childcare here, including childminders, nannies, nurseries and au pairs.

AIBU re babysitting

104 replies

NannyProblems101 · 13/08/2015 07:31

Hi
I'd really like some perspective on this as I genuinely want to be fair and reasonable.

I've had a nanny for 16mths (3DC aged 4-10). Her contract states that she works 12 hours per day, 5 days per week + one night per week baby sitting.

To date she has babysat approximately once every fortnight - usually to about 9pm. She has ocassionaly (perhaps less than 5 times baby sat until late).

I asked her to babysit next week until 11 and she has said she does not want to do it. In fact she does not want to babysit until late on any day where she has had the children at home all day (so no school holidays at all).

I get that it is a long day - although she only has youngest DC at the moment as older two are away, but I feel it is what she is paid for.

I spoke to her last night and she quoted employment law at me. I dont know where to go. I feel she gets flexibility and is paid well (she got a 10% raise and one months bonus last month) but theer seems to be no understanding that some days are better than others.

OP posts:
Are your children’s vaccines up to date?
MaggieW8 · 21/08/2015 15:38

Well the parents should seat the Nanny down and talk to her.

Blondeshavemorefun · 21/08/2015 21:08

Have you had a chat yet op?

CaptainSwan · 02/09/2015 09:38

I'm amazed at how many think this is wrong! I babysit relitively regularly, despite it not being in my contract however I am paid extra 'as and when' and it's not obligotary.

My hours per week are about 56 and it's very normal for me to go above 60. There's no chance I'd get a late start the following morning, I'm needed at work!

This is very very normal in the area I am certainly- I think your nanny is being massively out of order.

What's she on net per hour op?

JeffsanArsehole · 02/09/2015 09:56

I'd fire her. You sound like a great employer and none of what you're asking is in any way onerous.

New posts on this thread. Refresh page