Many nannies and senior caregivers have a routine work week that includes overtime. A nanny may work five 9-hour days per week, which is compensated as 40 hours at her regular hourly pay rate and 5 hours at her overtime rate of no less than 1.5 times the hourly rate.
Things go along swimmingly, right? But then there is a holiday like Labor Day or the caregiver takes a week of vacation and the weekly paycheck is less. Why is that?
Did you know that the obligation to pay the overtime premium is only based on hours worked in the 7-day work week? So the nanny that works 4 days on Labor Day week is not automatically entitled to overtime. The family can pay 8 or 9 hours of holiday pay (per the written agreement) and 36 hours of time worked at the regular pay rate. A $20 an hour nanny working will have $50 less in her gross pay, and a lower take home paycheck that week.
The written work agreement that anticipates and addresses possible friction points at time of hire is the key element to insuring a harmonious employment relationship. HWS publishes a free work agreement template to help define the most common areas of friction in the household employment relationship – download it today!