I'm thinking about bringing up a discussion of our maternity policy here. I'm curious to get some input, especially from other professional office environments, what was your maternity policy? Did you have any paid time? How much? Was it just short term disability? What did short term disability cover? If it was unpaid, how long were you allowed to take it? Etc, etc.
Please also include working environment/occupation. Like professional office/lawyer. Or hospital/nurse.
Re: Maternity policies
@Steamboat123 could you maybe PM me the name of your companies, and if they include their policy anywhere on their website or somewhere I can see it, send it to me? I want to put together some comparisons of what similar employees are getting.
Same goes for anyone else! I could use some help!
My company, which consists of very specialized professionals, only gives 4 weeks of short term disability, paid at 60% of your salary, and taxed on top of that. It's a very male-driven business, and all the partners have stay at home wives. They're really very clueless as to women in the workplace.
And I kind of feel an obligation. There is really only one female employee "above" me in our organization - there are a few around my same level - but those few haven't started having kids yet. I kinda feel like I need to help turn things around.
Before I went on maternity leave I was working full time (40 hr/week). These were my totals- 200 hr FMLA and 280 hr vacation. I saved my vacation hours in preparation. Fortunately, I continued accruing vacation time while I was off.
I am grandfathered into sick/FMLA time. New employees have to apply for short term disability and I'm not sure how that works. I work at a health system (hospital).
DS born 6/2013
I work for a large manufacturing plant. As a salaried employee, I had 6 weeks STD paid at 100% of my salary. Once that 6 weeks was up, I had to use up PTO until I had 2 weeks remaining for the year. Then I could switch to FMLA and had 12 weeks but was all unpaid. I ended up being off for 13 weeks. It could have been more but I wasn't getting paid and knew it was time to go back.
They've changed the policy in 2014 and now you have to drain your PTO to 1 week, which I think is super unfair. So if I have baby #2 in early in the year, I'll only have 1 week of PTO for the entire year when I come back to work.
When you are out for medical reasons (before or immediately after childbirth), you can use your accrued sick time and personal days and get paid. Then, when you are no longer considered medically disabled, you can no longer use sick days. You can also collect short term disability concurrently with your sick pay if you have a short term disability policy. Also, the state I work in has family leave insurance, which pays you part of your salary for six weeks to bond with a newborn infant.
So here is specifically what I did:
-I left when I was about 31 weeks pregnant due to preeclampsia and collected my paid sick time until it ran out.
-My disability has a four-week waiting period where I don't get benefits. This waiting period was fulfilled a few days before I had my son at around 36 weeks, so I was able to collect about six weeks of disability pay.
-I had the summer off unpaid as per usual.
-I took my six weeks of paid state family leave insurance at the beginning of the school year and went back to work mid-October when LO was 4.5 months.
You basically go on unemployment insurance for 52 weeks and get paid 55% of your salary up to a maximum of 55% of $48,600 or $514/week. You only start getting paid on week 3 (so you are really only paid for 50 weeks). These earning are taxed (and often taxed inaccurately so you end up owing money come April). Legally you are supposed to still accumulate PTO while off, but my company found a way around that.
Some companies offer top-up payments so you are closer to your actual salary while you are off. I did not get this, but our secondary health insurance did top me up for 6 weeks (would have been 8 for a c-section).