August 2, 2005
Swaziland Today...Uzbekistan Tomorrow
"...out of 168 nations in a Harvard
University study last year, 163 had some form of paid maternity leave,
leaving the United States in the company of Lesotho, Papua New Guinea
and Swaziland."
How many politicians take it upon
themselves to pronounce their particular political party or voting
record is (big effusive grin and maybe a wave of the flag) 'family
friendly' and that they are so proud of such?
Lost count?
I thought so.
How many voting records of said politicians match up with their public pronouncements?
Hint: you won't need your calculator for this one.
Maybe it takes a village. Maybe it takes a family. But what I do know
is it takes supporting and enacting actual 'family friendly'
legislation to earn such accolades.
Supporting and instituting such a national value is like patriotism.
Stop talking and start doing.
Or shut up.
Here is an Associated Press/Peter Svensson-written article that just might sober and shut up a few of the pols.
U.S. Sets Own Course on Maternity Leave
PETER SVENSSON
The Associated Press
July 26, 2005
-- In Santa Fe, N.M., Linda Strauss McIlroy, a
first-time mother, is trying to get used to the thought of soon putting
her two-month-old boy in day care so she can get back to work.
"It's hard for me to imagine leaving him," she
says. "Just not being with him all day, leaving him with a virtual
stranger. And then that's it till, you know, I retire. It's kind of
crazy to think about it."
Across the border in Vancouver, British Columbia, Suzanne Dobson is back at work after 14 months of paid maternity leave.
"It was great," she says. "I was still making pretty good money for being at home."
Across the ocean, in Sweden, Magnus Larsson is
looking forward to splitting 16 months of parental leave at 80 percent
pay with his girlfriend. They are expecting their first baby in a week.
With little public debate, the United States has
chosen a radically different approach to maternity leave than the rest
of the developed world. The United States and Australia are the only
industrialized countries that don't provide paid leave for new mothers
nationally, though there are exceptions in some U.S. states.
Australian mothers have it better, however, with
one year of job-protected leave. The U.S. Family and Medical Leave Act
provides for 12 weeks of job-protected leave, but it only covers those
who work for larger companies.
To put it another way, out of 168 nations in a
Harvard University study last year, 163 had some form of paid maternity
leave, leaving the United States in the company of Lesotho, Papua New
Guinea and Swaziland.
How did it end up this way?
For the rest, go here.
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