What are your plans for maternity leave from work? I get a whopping 4 weeks at 60% pay on Short Term Disability... after burning through 2 weeks of PTO. I really thought we had STD for longer than that, I really don't want to go back when the baby is 6 weeks old (or less, if I'm not able to do my physically demanding job up to literally going in to labor). I'm frustrated. I'm going to try to save up as much PTO as I can, but I only earn it so fast. I'm also our primary income so there's just not a feasible way for us to save up enough of a cushion in the next 6 months for me to just be able to take time without pay.
Re: Maternity Leave Woes
DS1 is 7. DD is 1. DS2 is coming in late April.
I've also started buying Target and Walmart gift cards each payday and started buying boxes of diapers so I don't have to spend so much once baby is here. I won't have to worry about having a babysitter as I'll be home for those 12 weeks but we are putting my son in a private preschool so that kinda blows.
Oh and ladies taking STD for the first time, remember that if you get health insurance through your job, you'll have to pay for your healthcare insurance out of that money while you are on leave.
Wk 2-7 - 60% paid by STD
Wk 8 - 100% paid by my PTO
Wk 9-12 - unpaid, unless I go back to work.
Using 2 weeks of PTO will leave me with 68h of PTO to use between now and November which I will need since my son will have at least two more procedures/hospital stays before baby is born.
Thankfully I am able to work flex time when I have an appointment and don't need to use PTO every time.
~EDD Nov 18, 2017 with my IUI success story~
[spoiler]
After the 18 weeks, I'm hoping to get to WFH 1-2 days a week.
Dating: 10/23/2013
Married: 6/13/2014
TTC since June 2016
BFP #1: 3/2/17 - MC 5/22/17
When I had DS3, I was part time. I was on bed rest from 20-something weeks on and wasn't allowed to go back to work until I was 16 weeks post-partum due to medical reasons. Because it was medical, my job could not fire me, but they did switch me from my particular part time shift to quote "something comparable" when I came back (hence why I was in a hurry to switch from part time to per diem). Maternity leave sucks.
"So sad!!" if he has enough Twitter character spaces left. Honestly, I don't foresee us getting paid maternity leave anytime in the near future. Women's rights in the workplace are so far behind here. Not to mention our president is a business man first. No CEO wants to pay out maternity leave.
DS1 is 7. DD is 1. DS2 is coming in late April.
My husband gets 2 full weeks paid paternity! Pretty rare (unfortunately) so we are happy!!!
DS1 is 7. DD is 1. DS2 is coming in late April.
I have the following set up:
- 12 weeks FMLA + 4 weeks of standard time off (Winter Break, Thanksgiving Break and February Break) = up to 16 weeks off
- Short-term disability = 5 weeks paid at 60%
- Flex Days = up to 15 paid, will likely use 10
- Paid Time off: during standard vacation time = 4 weeks
I plan to take about 10 weeks off full time, return during the 11th week for 2-3 days a week and do that for about 4 weeks.I want to hug you all ladies who don't get too much time after the baby is born and don't have the choice to stay home. This is hard and I hate so much that we as a country don't recognize the irony of how hard we make it on new moms.
@CubsFan7it never occurred to me, but HR has informed me that the weeks where I am using STD, my medical costs will go up. Just a heads up ladies- it's worth asking about not only your pay coverage but your medical coverage as well.
ETA: to recognize @CubsFan7 & my coverage
My company gives 6 weeks paid full and 6 weeks at 60% using STD. That's supposed to be amazing. With my son I only took 8 weeks (6 weeks paid, 2 weeks unpaid) and that was brutal. I would not recommend to anyone but my husband had just lost his job and we needed the income.
DS: 18 months
Dx DOR AMH .2
<a href="http://www.thebump.com/?utm_source=ticker&utm_medium=HTML&utm_campaign=tickers" title="Pregnancy"><img
Obviously, as a pregnant woman and mother to be soon, I would love much better maternity leave pay and plans. But, working in public education, the funding just isn't there to do it. There is no way we could pay someone for a full year or even six months of salary, plus put another teacher in the classroom to cover them. Education funding is crap in our state (and the US in general) and it's only getting worse. So it's not that I don't want to pay it, but we can't afford to pay it.
I have had some employees (women/mothers) tell me I don't care about maternity concerns because I don't have children. Which is incredibly hurtful, especially because my own journey to motherhood hasn't been the easiest at moments. They don't know I am pregnant now, but I do care about these issues and I am have implemented changes to improve it (i.e., purchased STD for the entire organization, which pays 5-6 weeks at 60% pay) and restructured contracts to make it easier to take time off/offered more flex days. But it isn't always easy.
My understand in Canada is that the government/taxes actually pay for the up to the year of time off. So the financial cost does not fall on the employer. So that is a different situation. I know there are great long term benefits and increased employee retention when there are good parental leave practices in place, but it is a cost that not all institutions can afford.
weeks of vacation time so it'll come out to a total of 22 weeks paid. I honestly had no idea how horrible the maternity leave policies are for employees in this country until my friend told me of her company's dismal policy and I started doing more research into it after I found out that I was pregnant. I'm incredibly thankful that my company offers such a generous maternity leave benefit because I realize the struggle families have to deal with on this issue.
The mat leave situation in the US is absolutely ridiculous and I can't believe that such an advanced country has such an archaic system.
Edit to clarify time.
DS#2 3/15
Baby #3~
So so while it pains me to not see better benefits, I wonder how many of us ladies would voluntarily raise our taxes. Canadians pay an unemployment tax and employers pay a portion. In the US, only employer pays a small fee. Also, in the US, we can utilize, depending on income, lots of tax deductions that Canadians do not have. Our system definitely doesn't value parental or maternity leave, but we also don't fund it via traditional mechanisms.
Meanwhile our president is just funneling taxpayer money into his stupid GD resort and will waste more taxpayer money on an absurd racist wall. I literally feel like I am dealing with a child not "the greatest country in the world". America, you're the reason we can't have nice things.
P.S. I don't hate America and I do like living here but I don't like the selfishness and lack of thinking about women as human beings.
-6 weeks unpaid disability (SINCE WHEN IS CREATING HUMAN LIFE CONSIDERED A DISABILITY?!) with continued health coverage (you would still owe your monthly premiums). Job is safe and guaranteed upon return.
-6 weeks unpaid parental leave during which you receive 6 days of medical coverage SIX DAYS. Baby gets 30 days. I have to assume that "days" was a typo in our handbook. You do not accrue PTO. You are not eligible for paid holidays (was anyone else planning on milking the holiday season for their mat leave?! Oh well.) They will make "every reasonable accommodation to hold your position for you".
I have 138 hours of sick-time saved up and am about to hit 15 days of vacation this summer, so I'll do my best to negotiate something better. My boss and I are on really great terms and I know she values my work, so my hope is that she reacts well to the news and takes it well when I explain to her why I think our maternity leave policy is a punishment. I will happily go to the board of directors to plead my case. We are a non-profit that primarily serves women living either in poverty or on the line. Women who often receive no time off after giving birth (some have gone back to work 2 weeks after giving birth. Some even less than that.) In my opinion, we are a part of the problem if we can't offer something as basic as a humane maternity leave policy to our own employees.
In terms of costs to the employer, while I totally agree that government subsidies would be an incredible incentive and take a huge burden off of businesses with smaller budgets (#goals), the issue is cultural. We tend to greatly undervalue investing in our employees in any way that doesn't translate to a direct benefit to the bottom line. Especially women.
Even so, numerous studies have shown that if you invest in things like fair and humane maternity leave policies, you not only retain more employees, but they're often more committed and loyal to you upon their return. THE MORE YOU KNOW.
I don't know if anything has shocked me more in my life (besides last years election because WHO SAW THAT COMING) (I mean that platonically/a-politically. Sticking to my MAT Leave rant here) than learning that TEACHERS (arguably the most female-dominated field in our country? Maybe rivaled only by nurses?) have the most garbage maternity leave policy ever. How?!
I'm not sure if anyone else feels like this, but this is my first time being pregnant and I never expected to feel the need to defend it on so many fronts. To defend that I'm still a valuable person. So over people and the boxes they put us in.
I would happily pay a higher unemployment tax personally if it meant better benefits overall. But it's a collective effort and a system-wide issue that must be addressed.
DS1 is 7. DD is 1. DS2 is coming in late April.