My husband and I have been trying the last three months. In this time period I have became very unhappy with my current work environment and have started applying to other jobs. I'm fairly confident that it will happen. As much as I want to become pregnant I know that this puts a whole other thing to deal with. We have insurance through my husband's company, so that is not a factor, but in order to qualify for FMLA you have to be employed for a year with any company. My husband is heartbroken that we have to wait again. I know that it could take up to a year for me to get pregnant. What is your advice on waiting or keep things moving along?
Re: Let's take a pause
For me, I would keep trying while looking for a new job. As you've said, you have no idea how long it will take you to get pregnant. And is an internal transfer an option? That may be the best of both worlds.
There might be a third option for you though. Are you in a position where you could work through a pregnancy then quit after childbirth? A friend of mine did this, spent 6 months with her child, and then re-entered the workforce with a new company. Some caveats: she's in a high demand field, good economic area, and she and her husband had the means to handle the loss of income.
http://www.fertilityfriend.com/home/5c047a
FMLA is not income. It is unpaid leave with a guarantee that your position, or one commiserate with it, will be available to you when you go back to work. So, the real issue is will they hold your job for you if you haven't been there a year. STD or other benefits are up to the employer to supply or not.
Lucky you. FMLA is a federally mandated law, so if your company chooses to pay during it, that's on them, but not technically part of FMLA. I know some states have additional laws for it too (looks like you're in one of them). When I got pregnant, I was the first in my company in many years, so I actually went to my bosses about the lack of any maternity policy beyond FMLA. They took a look at what others are doing and did implement something. It's not great (they cover the difference in STD so you can get your 100% for 6 weeks) but it's better than nothing.
Otherwise if you can tolerate your job enough and it doesn't stress you out completely, then I would say to have the baby, and begin looking for a job afterwards.
Married 8-9-14
Me 34 DH 33
TTC #1
Hypothyroid
If your company is not currently offering STD, see if you can get them to wrangle some people together for the benefits. If they hem and haw, ask them if it's possible to have the benefits be voluntary (meaning you pay 100% of the premium). You need to be on the policy for at least 10 months before childbirth qualifies as an expense (so you can't sign up the day you find out you're pregnant). Depending on the premium amount you might prefer to just stockpile that money in a liquid savings account.
http://www.fertilityfriend.com/home/5c047a
So baby cooks for nine months. And FMLA applies after 1 year. So you have to stop "trying" for only 3-4 months. Start new job in June, get knocked up in September, FMLA eligible in June next year, baby due in June of the same year.
Married 8-9-14
Me 34 DH 33
TTC #1
Hypothyroid