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Emmeline Tyler's avatar

Great article. It is outrageous the conditions you have to put up with in the US. I read the stat about only 30% of workers getting paid leave over and over because I just couldn’t comprehend it.

I notice some of your data is from Australia, where I am. We have paid parental leave and subsidised childcare and the motherhood penalty is still really bad here. Obviously the US needs that as an absolute baseline but it is not a panacea.

I feel like you know this based on my reading of your article, but until we start to see childcare and raising children as a shared responsibility not just for mothers, and money being for women as well as men, this is never going to change.

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Polycrastinator's avatar

It’s funny, I’ve been saying for a while, half jokingly, that we need mandatory paternity leave if we want equality. Not mandatory it’s offered, mandatory that men take it.

I’m fortunate to find myself in a management position these days and I always make a point to let my staff know that when we had our kids, both my wife and myself took 3 months of leave. Partly that’s so they have the expectation that it’s ok for them to do so, male or female, and partly because a lot of the time folks don’t think of how flexibly this can be done. We are fortunate to live in New Jersey, where paid leave, 3 months for each parent, is now law (although sadly it’s only 60% salary). But you can also take that time at any point in the first year, and it doesn’t need to be in one chunk. My wife took off 2 months initially (using disability after birth meant she could take more than 3 months total), while I returned to work after 2 weeks. She then returned to work 3 days a week, while I worked 2 days a week, and that allowed us have our son home until he was 6 months old, and meant we were both present in the office for most of that period, just to a lesser degree.

A lot of the time I think folks don’t realize that’s an option (and, to be fair, throughout much of the US it isn’t). It’s absolutely important for men to show that this kind of thing can be done, and also for management to not only make sure their employees are aware they’ll be supported on leave, but also to walk the walk if it’s them who’re being the carers.

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