Policy Update: February 13, 2015

Policy Update: February 13, 2015

BC Logo_SquareA quick look back at events this week impacting women and families, from Valerie Young, a public policy analyst with Mom-mentum.

Senator Patty Murray and Representative Rosa DeLauro introduced the paid sick days bill, the Healthy Families Act, again this week.  If enacted, the bill would provide employees at workplaces with at least 15 workers 7 earned sick days per year, for their own illness or to care for a sick family member.  Smaller businesses would be required to grant workers 7 days of unpaid sick leave.  Currently, 43 million US workers have no access to a single paid sick day.  More than a “woman’s issue”, earned sick leave is a matter of public health, family economic security, and employment policy.  Here’s a fact sheet with greater detail.

Following the President’s call for paid family leave, including maternity and paternity leave, articles have been zipping around the ether about how it would serve new parents, newly born and adopted children, bolster business and grow the economy.  A recent favorite is a Raw Story piece about our disconnect between “family values” and our woeful public policies.  Noteworthy is the fact that every other industrialized country has already implemented paid parental leave.  Why not the US?  Because the vast majority of our lawmakers are white males who have never served as family caregivers, which leads to the next item….

There are just too few women in Congress, especially the current Congress which began its work last month.  According to Quartz:  “Instead, the US ranks 75th in the world in women’s representation. Standing alone, US Democratic women would be ranked 27th in the world, similar to countries such as Austria and Germany. Conversely, Republican women’s representation, which is currently 11% of Republican seats, would hold a ranking of 116th in the world, alongside countries like India and Jordan.”  More women in politics means better public policy.

Do you think childcare and early education matters are personal issues, with implications only for the family?  There’s more to consider, as data establishes that how and with whom a child spends time in the earliest years will make a difference in the family’s economic security for decades to come, and the child’s educational achievement, income and health.  Childcare is actually a multi-generational economic issue, according to Catherine Rampell in this Washington Post op-ed

Follow Valerie on Facebook (Your (Wo)Man in Washington) and Twitter (@WomanInDC) and find her on the blog at Mom-mentum.

 

Policy Update: January 30, 2015

Policy Update: January 30, 2015

BC Logo_SquareHere is a quick look back at events this week impacting women and families, from Valerie Young, a public policy analyst with Mom-mentum.

We’re still feeling the lift from the President’s mention of the critical need for pro-family policies in the State of the Union Address.  Advocates are working harder than ever to push Congress towards paid leave, and a bill has been introduced to secure 6 weeks of paid parental leave to federal employees to make permanent the recent executive order which only lasts as long as this Presidency.  It will still be a long slog, so for good news I look further afield.

Tacoma, Washington is the latest locality to pass an earned sick days bill.  Splitting 8 to 1, the city council passed a bill offering 3 days of paid leave in the employee’s first year and 5 days in the 2nd.  The leave may also be used in cases of stalking or domestic violence.  Three states have enacted paid sick days laws (Connecticut, California, and Massachusetts), and 16 cities have followed suit.  Even so, about 40% of workers put their jobs on the line if they stay home with the flu or take a sick child to the doctor.

The World Health Organization has released a report stating that breastfeeding benefits the health of mother and child while it occurs, and benefits for the child for many years after in both health and cognitive function.  Ironically, without paid maternity leave for every mother, millions of us will never reach the 1 year breastfeeding mark set by the American Academy of Pediatrics.  Even with legal protections in the Affordable Care Act and some state laws, the benefits to employers of a good lactation set up are being ignored, according to  The Horrors Of Pumping Breast Milk At Work (And Why Employers Should Care)

Ever wonder if you’re doing the right things as a parent?  You don’t have to be perfect; just work in these daily family routines, from the experts at the Council on Contemporary Families, relying on data from the US Census Bureau.

A Swedish photographer is directing his lens to dads on paternity leave.  While Sweden prioritizes parental time with newborns in its public policies, there’s great variation in who uses it and for how long.  By law, parents of a newly born or adopted child have up to 480 days of leave.  And it’s paid.

Follow Valerie on Facebook (Your (Wo)Man in Washington) and Twitter (@WomanInDC) and find her on the blog at Mom-mentum.