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Related: Editorials & Other Articles, Issue Forums, Alliance Forums, Region ForumsHow Obama’s Budget Helps Working Women And Their Families
How Obamas Budget Helps Working Women And Their Families
Our guest blogger is Sarah Glynn, a policy analyst at the Center for American Progress.
President Obama submitted his budget for fiscal year 2013 to Congress this morning, with the explicit goal of rebuild(ing) our economy and strengthen(ing) the middle class. The $3.8 trillion budget includes $5 million to help individual states launch paid leave programs similar to those in California and New Jersey that allow workers to take paid time off from work to provide care to a new child or ailing family member.
While some have argued that government intervention into work-family policies will only increase the cost of employing women, and that the marketplace will respond by voluntarily providing policies in order to retain valuable employees, the evidence does not support these arguments. At present, there are huge gaps in access to maternity leave for working women. According to the U.S. Census Bureau, between 2006 and 2008 about two-thirds of mothers with a bachelors degree or higher received paid maternity leave, but only 18.5 percent of those with less than a high school degree did. New mothers who have access to paid maternity leave are more likely to return to their previous employer, and 97.6 percent of those who return to the same employer do so at their previous pay level or higher. When women have to change employers after giving birth, often times because they are forced to quit or are fired in the absence of paid maternity leave, more than 30 percent experience a drop in pay.
New research on Californias Family Disability Insurance program illustrates how offering paid leave to women after childbirth helps individual workers and the economy as a whole. Californias program was passed in 2002, and became available to workers in July of 2004. Paid leave is administered through the State Disability Insurance program, and is funded through payroll taxes on employees. Eligible workers in California who take leave receive 55 percent of their regular pay, up to a maximum of $928 per week, for up to 6 weeks to bond with a new child or to care for a seriously ill family member.
Californias program has increased both job retention and the number of hours worked by employed mothers. More than 95 percent of workers who took leave in 2009 and 2010 returned to work; 80 percent returned to the same employer. Workers who made $20 an hour, meanwhile, returned to the same employer 83 percent of the time. And according to researchers from the University of Virginia and Columbia University, paid leave increased hours worked by mothers six to nine percent.
- more -
http://thinkprogress.org/economy/2012/02/13/424534/obama-budget-paid-medical-leave/
Our guest blogger is Sarah Glynn, a policy analyst at the Center for American Progress.
President Obama submitted his budget for fiscal year 2013 to Congress this morning, with the explicit goal of rebuild(ing) our economy and strengthen(ing) the middle class. The $3.8 trillion budget includes $5 million to help individual states launch paid leave programs similar to those in California and New Jersey that allow workers to take paid time off from work to provide care to a new child or ailing family member.
While some have argued that government intervention into work-family policies will only increase the cost of employing women, and that the marketplace will respond by voluntarily providing policies in order to retain valuable employees, the evidence does not support these arguments. At present, there are huge gaps in access to maternity leave for working women. According to the U.S. Census Bureau, between 2006 and 2008 about two-thirds of mothers with a bachelors degree or higher received paid maternity leave, but only 18.5 percent of those with less than a high school degree did. New mothers who have access to paid maternity leave are more likely to return to their previous employer, and 97.6 percent of those who return to the same employer do so at their previous pay level or higher. When women have to change employers after giving birth, often times because they are forced to quit or are fired in the absence of paid maternity leave, more than 30 percent experience a drop in pay.
New research on Californias Family Disability Insurance program illustrates how offering paid leave to women after childbirth helps individual workers and the economy as a whole. Californias program was passed in 2002, and became available to workers in July of 2004. Paid leave is administered through the State Disability Insurance program, and is funded through payroll taxes on employees. Eligible workers in California who take leave receive 55 percent of their regular pay, up to a maximum of $928 per week, for up to 6 weeks to bond with a new child or to care for a seriously ill family member.
Californias program has increased both job retention and the number of hours worked by employed mothers. More than 95 percent of workers who took leave in 2009 and 2010 returned to work; 80 percent returned to the same employer. Workers who made $20 an hour, meanwhile, returned to the same employer 83 percent of the time. And according to researchers from the University of Virginia and Columbia University, paid leave increased hours worked by mothers six to nine percent.
- more -
http://thinkprogress.org/economy/2012/02/13/424534/obama-budget-paid-medical-leave/
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How Obama’s Budget Helps Working Women And Their Families (Original Post)
ProSense
Feb 2012
OP
ProSense
(116,464 posts)1. Kick! n/t