Nanny Leaving Abruptly
Parent Q&A
Select any title to view the full question and replies.
Ghosted by nanny after 2 months?
–May 3, 2023Hello, I'm really perplexed and concerned. Our nanny/sitter of two months has seemingly disappeared.
We've been working with a regular nanny/sitter 1 day per week since early March. The relationship has been good - there have been zero issues. She's been pretty consistent (out sick a few times) but all very explainable.
Last week, she called out sick with a stomach bug (unfortunate but totally fine by us). This week, I checked in with her the day prior to her scheduled day to make sure that she was feeling better. No response for 12+ hours, so we arranged for backup care. On her scheduled day, she didn't call and didn't show up.
It's been several days now of radio silence. I've tried texting a few times and I also sent her an email. I have no emergency contact info for her, but I do have a copy of her drivers license. What should I do here? Should I just assume I'm being ghosted and move on, or should I be doing more?
My son truly enjoyed her company and we really liked working with her. I am saddened, concerned and confused.
May 3, 2023Explain Nanny’s poor behavior to previous reference?
–May 1, 2021We have continually had trouble with our part time nanny who quit today abruptly because she was upset that we had confronted some performance issues we needed to be addressed. Namely, not giving adequate notice when changing schedule or taking days off, and misusing paid days off by taking sick days for personal healthcare that could easily be scheduled outside of work hours with no notice or regard to our schedule. She additionally pressured us to pay her for extra vacation days and a holiday that were not named in our agreement. We communicated that since the terms of our arrangement had been broken so many times, we would feel more comfortable proceeding in an hourly arrangement going forward because we couldn’t afford to pay a part time nanny to take so much time off when we weren’t receiving the benefit of sufficient notice and ability to control our schedules. We hoped this conversation would help her to see our point of view as a family needing support and that she would rise to the occasion, but she was argumentative and hostile and then quit abruptly a few days later with no notice.
Fortunately we had prepared contingencies for her departure and knew this outcome was possible when confronting her performance issues, but we felt forced to confront her performance because she had repeatedly made it difficult for us to complete our work obligations. In addition, she broke COVID protocol by attending a wedding when it was expressly not permitted by California law or our arrangement and took very little initiative when it came to caring for our son, it was a constant source of stress and work for me.
At the end of this, we feel we have been exploited. We were as generous as was financially possible, paid an above market hourly rate and gave paid time off (for a part time job!). We gave a generous holiday bonus after a very short time being employed and allowed her to bring her daughter to our home to help ease the challenge COVID presented to all of us this last year. At no point was the slightest courtesy or consideration returned and we were treated like managers at an hourly shift job.
We spoke with her reference when interviewing candidates who had been happy with her, but had not employed her for a very long period of time. Her positive reference was the reason we hired her over another candidate. My question is, would you convey this story back to her reference to hopefully save another family from this type of experience? We feel strongly this is not a person with the basic maturity level to support working professionals.
May 1, 2021Keep in contact w/departed nanny or no?
–Sep 25, 2019I have a dilemma and I'm hoping to get some unbiased opinion.
My son was VERY close with his full time nanny of 11 months. How close? We hung out with her family on the weekends sometimes, and our kids played together all of summer 2018. Meaning, instead of putting her son in camp, she just brought him along, and I still paid her the full rate. Well, in January of this year, out of the blue, she told us she has to go take care of an ill friend. My partner and I were totally caught off guard, did not see this coming at all. At first I was understanding, she's a kind person, she needs to take care of a friend during her final days/months/years.. and I assumed she was giving us our agreed upon 1 months notice. But NO, she was gone in 8 days and left us scrambling. We had no way to prepare our son for her sudden departure, we were in the middle a house move, and our lives were thrown into total chaos. I don't think I've forgiven her, because I feel like she totally disregarded my son's well-being and threw my son's affections away. My son asked about her a lot in the early months - when she was going to come visit, he wants to show her this and that... but he's asking less often. But he still brings her up, and I can tell he misses her. He'll say "(nanny's name) got me this book/truck/toy" or "(nanny's name) used to read/play this with me" or "(nanny's name) and I used to come here (library/park/etc)".. Since her quitting, she and I have had a couple of superficial text exchanges. From our side, we've said she can come visit if convenient, when she's not caring for her friend. But she's not put any effort into asking to see him or any weekend play dates with her son. I just feel like she totally kicked us to the curb, and it hurts.
So if you were me, would you put any effort into contacting her and seeing if she wants to see your child? I feel like my son doesn't quite understand her leaving, but it may be just as confusing for her to show up one time or a couple of times, and then disappear again. I just don't know what's the best way to go about this and could use some insights.
Sep 25, 2019
I'm sorry you're experiencing that! I don't have any first hand experience but I have a friend who had the same thing happen to them with a part-time nanny in San Jose. The person just never showed up for their scheduled day and then didn't respond to messages for over a week. I think at some point they finally figured out that she took another job and just didn't tell them. I don't think there is anything else you can do unfortunately- you have communicated with her via multiple channels (text/email) and have not heard back. Unless you have any reason to believe she was being abused or otherwise unsafe, I think you sadly just move on.
Sad to think about but maybe she is critically ill or there’s been an emergency or accident? Or lost her phone and your number, and doesn’t have a computer at home to check email? (This happened to my incredibly communicative nanny a few months ago). If you had a good relationship beforehand I can’t imagine she’d just ghost you with not even a text. What if you wrote a letter to her home address, even hand delivered it to see if there are any signs she’s home (or not)? Seems bold in this day and age of digital communication but I think it would be well intentioned.
Meanwhile, you may want to put the feelers out for backup care just in case she won’t be coming back for whatever reason. It takes time to sort that out so unfortunately probably wise to at least get the process started.
sorry, this sucks and I hope everything turns out ok for your family and your nanny!
A very similar thing happened to a friend of mine: the nanny, who our friend regarded as "a member of the family" suddenly moved out, without explanation.
There may be some cultural overtones involved.
The departure may have nothing to do with her having any dissatisfaction with working for your family. She needed to move on, for whatever reason. She felt that you were a nice employer, and she did not want to upset you with a conversation about her decision to quit.
Alternatively, there may have been some issue about her working conditions, but she was too shy, or felt that she did not have the language skills to negotiate.
In any case, she is out of the picture.
My advice would be that if she reappears, don't rehire her. A working parent needs a more reliable child care provider.
At the very least, I would check in some kind of way to be sure she's ok.
You're her employer, you may be the only person expecting to see her for weeks... Please call the police in her city and ask for a welfare check/report her missing if necessary. They'll knock on her door and make sure she's there and okay, and they can check the hospitals to see if she's sick enough that she had to be admitted. Especially if she lives alone, if she's seriously ill or injured and can't help herself, your call could save her life. If you think her ghosting you is a real possibility, you could try one more text and phone call letting her know you're concerned and you're going to call the police you check in her, just to give her the chance to say she's fine if she is, but you don't have to. Police coming for a welfare check won't get her in trouble, so there's no harm in calling.
I think your problem is that your nanny has found a better job. You said she was working for you one day a week. Most nannies need to work full time, so your nanny was probably patching together childcare gigs until something better came along, and something better *did* come along. You also said that your nanny had been out sick a few days since March. That's a lot of sick days in just a few months! I had a nanny for 3 years who missed maybe 5 days total due to illness. It really sounds like your nanny got a better job working for someone who can give her more hours. Maybe she was trying to give you a hint that a one-day-a-week nanny isn't going to be all that reliable. I think you should either increase the hours for the job or connect with another family that only needs their nanny 4 days a week.