M: Maternity/Paternity Leave

    Paid family leave combats poverty, gives children a healthy start, and lowers the wage gap between women and men by providing structural support to balance work and family.

    Selena's Story

    Selena's baby boy, Connor, was born six weeks early. As Connor was rushed to the Neonatal Intensive Care unit, Selena found herself alone in a hospital bed realizing that she was going to go home well before her baby. "There was no way we could afford for me to take off more than we planned,” recalls Selena. So after Selena had the baby on Thursday, she was released from the hospital Friday, and was back at her desk on Monday morning. “It was the hardest two and a half weeks of my life,” she says recalling the ache of being away from her newborn son. More »

    Know the Facts

    • Having a baby is a leading cause of "poverty spells" in the U.S. -- when income dips below what's needed for basic living expenses.
    • In the U.S., 49% of mothers cobble together paid leave following childbirth by using sick days, vacation days, disability leave, and maternity leave.
    • 51% of new mothers lack any paid leave -- so some take unpaid leave, some quit, some even lose their jobs.
    • The U.S is one of only 4 countries that doesn't offer paid leave to new mothers -- the others are Papua New Guinea, Swaziland, and Lesotho.
    • Paid family leave has been shown to reduce infant mortality by as much as 20% (and the U.S. ranks a low 37th of all countries in infant mortality).

    What You Can Do

    MomsBlogging on Maternity & Paternity Leave

    EU: Don’t Force Women to Stay Home!

    Posted March 12, 2010 by The Lattice Group

    The European Union Commission has proposed a new directive, to be voted on in March, that would make maternity leave compulsory for the first six weeks after a woman gives birth. You read that correctly — compulsory. As in, women would be forced to stay home, regardless of their own wishes, if they have children.
    Beyond [...]

    Bring on the radical homemakers

    Posted by Katrina Alcorn

    …At some point, of course, I realized I wasn’t happy. I was trapped. I had money, but not time. It was like being surrounded by food, and dying of thirst.

    It turns out that there is a way out of this mess. There are people all over this country–both women and men–who have made a conscious decision to value their time more than their money. Against the formidable current of popular culture, they have decided that this may be the only life they will ever have, and they’re going to live it fully.

    Calling All Humans: Who Pays for us to Propagate?

    Posted March 1, 2010 by Melissa Bartick

    Women now comprise about half the US workforce, according to a major story in the December 30 issue of the Economist. In other words, half our workforce bears all our children. Anyone who wants a child of one’s own must recognize that somewhere, a woman will bear that child and will likely nurse him. However, [...]

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