If your contract says Monday through Friday 7-4 then thats all you are obligated to provide. Days on the weekends were an added bonus that she got for free (or paid if she paid it). Again HER needs changed, not yours. You offered to provide some weekend childcare for her depending upon your availability but that is not a requirement of your contract.
Her schedule changed therefore she needs to find alternative childcare which means she needs to give you a two-week termination notice.
The contracted hours are Monday-Friday and do not include weekends therefore I'm assuming here that any days on the weekends were extra. She is only obligated to provide childcare during the weekday, not on weekends. The parents needs have changed. Not the provider. If taken to court a judge will ask to see what was contracted.
I do weekend childcare all the time for my regular clients and I don't require them to sign a different contract for when they want weekend childcare because I am only obligated to provide childcare for what is contracted, weekends are just extra days. And this is coming from a business lawyer friend of ours in CA which helped me do my contract and handbook. I had this problem once before and the parent threatened to contact a lawyer but I never heard from them again other than to receive a check in the mail for what they owed me.
Don't forget that you can also report any debt owed to you to ProviderWatch.com for free. It's a national debt inquiry company catered directly towards childcare. You can check to see if clients owe money to other childcare providers (for a fee) but reporting a debt is always free.
This just seems like another case of Give a parent "special" and "special" becomes "normal" and then they expect more. Now that you have said no to them you have exceeded your purpose and are no longer useful. It's unfortunate but it happens quite often.
Her schedule changed therefore she needs to find alternative childcare which means she needs to give you a two-week termination notice.
If you look at it this way, YOU are actually terminating the relationship. I'm assuming you've done at least some weekend care for her, but you don't want to do all weekend care? So you are saying that her schedule no longer works for you, and you no longer wish to care for her child because of it.
I do weekend childcare all the time for my regular clients and I don't require them to sign a different contract for when they want weekend childcare because I am only obligated to provide childcare for what is contracted, weekends are just extra days. And this is coming from a business lawyer friend of ours in CA which helped me do my contract and handbook. I had this problem once before and the parent threatened to contact a lawyer but I never heard from them again other than to receive a check in the mail for what they owed me.
Don't forget that you can also report any debt owed to you to ProviderWatch.com for free. It's a national debt inquiry company catered directly towards childcare. You can check to see if clients owe money to other childcare providers (for a fee) but reporting a debt is always free.
This just seems like another case of Give a parent "special" and "special" becomes "normal" and then they expect more. Now that you have said no to them you have exceeded your purpose and are no longer useful. It's unfortunate but it happens quite often.
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