First, LOVE your alias...very apropros.
I have a lot to say about this...
The timing of this question couldn't be more perfect. We recently moved and I hired yet another housekeeper. She was very upset yesterday and close to tears, b/c a few of the families she has worked for in the past have treated her so poorly. They did not even offer a glass of water. I always provide drinks and a meal when a cleaner is in my home. Where do others learn to treat s/o with clearly fewer resources so poorly? My mantra - again - Do unto others as you would have them do unto you.
My complaints with cleaning services are:
1. Having read Nickeled and Dimed and used several services, I know for a fact that they treat their employees pretty poorly. The service charges a premium and pays the worker maybe minimum wage.
2. They are taught and instructed to do just a surface job, no deep cleaning and ONLY what is on the list. We are charged for too many common sense extras.
3. The quality of workers is hit or miss and turn over is atrociously high b/c of No. 4....
4. Most cleaning service companies in America don't provide any benefits: health, medical, dental, sick time, vacation...it's just a grueling, hourly job year after year. And yet we need these community based support systems. Why is it so difficult to pay and treat others with basic courtesies and human decency. Are business owners that greedy? Is overhead that high for a cleaning company? One service, years ago, I paid a guy $80 to clean our 3 Bedroom house. He sent 2 gals, who spent 2 hours. He paid them $6 an hour. $12 x2 = they made $24 total. He made $56 for not even being there and sending used rags. I don't earn that as a skilled piano teacher. We kept getting sick and I kept blaming it on those rags and vacuum cleaners used in s/o else's home. They even drove their own car. His overhead and salary for every house cleaned does not need to exceed theirs by so much. I don't know if others take the time to reflect about these arrangements, but I find them financially and morally reprehensible. And - just another great reason to have socialized medicine, so that poor people who don't have great jobs can still have access to basic medicine.
That's my rant about a service. The positives about a service, is that they are in and out quickly and there's no need to befriend the workers. They are there to clean and go. The services usually provide a list of what they do and they are pretty good about follow through. My husband is very leery of giving a service keys to our home to enter if we are not home. He actually forbids it, so this means I must be around. And it's complicated with kids and schedules. We just don't trust the services due to the turnover.
The drawbacks of just one cleaning person is that it naturally takes longer. And b/c of that there is more personal time, which can be either beneficial or draining, depending upon the individuals circumstances. But the sole housekeeper typically treats our home like their own and if not, I would find another. And with the independent cleaner, I can run out to the store and leave the kids for a bit if necessary. It is definitely more of a personal commitment, like giving rides when she is finished. But I don't feel that s/o just whipped through my home and has to clean 4 or 5 other homes still.
I also prefer having s/o use my own cleaning supplies, rags, and vacuum cleaners. There are now green cleaning companies that I would consider getting a quote from, but I have also heard they are quite pricey.