Imzadi
♥ Saved by an angel in a trench coat!
- Joined
- Oct 29, 2004
- Messages
- 40,048
You’re paying $40,000 a year for a driver??
Yes, I know that it’s crazy. The alternative is that the kids can’t do their activities, or one of us can’t work. Maybe both of us can’t work because there are times when my husband is driving one kid and the au pair is driving the other.
That’s why other parents want to carpool.
I am not knocking you for getting specialized drivers. Here, we had SEVERAL news stories about various Lyft drivers (a couple years or so ago,) which raped women, or tried to drive them off to the route to secluded areas to try to rape them and they had to jump out of the cars. And these are adult women, not children who are even more vulnerable. I don't use Lyft at all as they don't seem to vet their drivers well or at all. And ever since there was that one woman who got into a car she thought was the Uber she hired, and it was a guy who took advantage of her wrongly getting into the car and killed her as she viciously tried to fight back, I am super careful to make sure I am getting into the right car. (That case changed how Uber does safety now, so passengers know which car is one of their cars.) So I can totally understand paying for a good, SAFE service to protect your child and any others who ride with her.
However, you have ever right to get compensated for when other children are using the service with your child. And you need the proper contact and emergency info for each child. You might even ask them to sign a paper stating they know a hired service is driving the children.
You or your husband can say starting this school year, any other children will be required to pay for their child to ride along with your child when this service is used. As someone else mentioned there is probably a policy for safety, insurance and liability issues about driving around other people's children. What if there's an accident? How will the other parents be contacted?
You have a right to say you need $XX amount of dollars for each ride. It has to be paid in advance or on the day of the ride, payable via Venmo or PayPal. Approach this as a business transaction, not some "friendship" favor that is not really there. And when they don't pay, as they won't, you can cancel the follow weeks. saying you never received payment for previous weeks and they need to make other arrangements. I would simply text that info, since you seem to have a problem saying this in person.
I’m just not sure how to do it in a way that doesn’t burn bridges unnecessarily.
With "friends" like this who use you, not sure it matters if they are "enemies." This situation is all one sided. They will NEVER be there when/if you need them for something, will they? Not flaming, but this seems more about you needing to be a "people pleaser" than about not burning bridges.
Security expert Gavin de Becker often says, "People who can't say No, end up with people who can't let go."
This situation won't change until you do say No and establish clear boundaries that you won't be USED. The way you've stated this, there is no/to very little reciprocity going on. So, this is about you not being able to say No as it makes YOU uncomfortable. You are also teaching your daughter that people will take advantage of her too, as she has no boundaries set on her behalf.