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What Children Need from Their Parents’ Employers Ellen Bravo Multi-State Working Families Consortium Presentation for BUILD Conference November 16, 2006
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Being a Good Family Member Can Cost You Your Job Not enough time to care: children suffer Affects many, but especially low-wage
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Time to Care More than balance: basics More than stress: crisis Race as well as class Consequences for kids Affects women most, but low-wage men, too.
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Background: 1978 Pregnancy Discrimination Act: can’t fire women for being pregnant – but you don’t have to hold their jobs. pregnancy like other temporary disabilities – but most women work for firms with no short-term disability plans.
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Problems with FMLA Nearly half the private sector workforce isn’t covered Doesn’t cover siblings, same-sex partners Doesn’t cover routine illness It’s unpaid.
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Background: Sick Days Half the workforce – and ¾ of low-wage workers - have no paid sick days. Many who do can’t use them to care for sick family members.
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Background: 1996 “Welfare as we know it” is ended -- by those who’ve never known it. What low-wage women used for family leave TANF is modeled on low- wage jobs – which forced many onto welfare. Cut rolls, not poverty
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Attitudes, Assumptions ‘Aha’ moments in Across the Boundaries study of low-wage workers: “Do you have any idea what my life is like?”
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Institutional Policies and Practices Lack of Policies “ If the kids are sick, there’s no place for them to go. The child care center called and said I had to get my daughter. I was fired.” -DeNice, rural county outside Eau Claire, WI
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Problem Policies Cont’d Lack of Flexibility : Not allowed to make up time Rigid use of personal days At the fringes: Even “best list” companies fall short Policies for managers only (e.g., lactation) Depends on manager discretion
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Problem Practices Cont’d “Objective” requirements affecting women differently Example: no tolerance for lateness Based on stereotyped view of “ideal worker” as someone with car, phone, back-up
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Reality for Low-Wage Workers “ I had 4 jobs - I drove a school bus, delivered newspapers, worked with the Girl Scouts, and sold Tupperware. None of the jobs had benefits. I had to make hard choices about supporting my kids instead of spending time with them. When my toddler was sick, I took her with me on the bus.” - Julia, Milwaukee
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Affects Men As Well Low-wage men, especially men of color, have least flexible jobs Many more would be good fathers if not punished at work
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Impact on Parents – and Kids Work can’t pay if it doesn’t last – and it can’t last if it jeopardizes kids. Cost of starting over.
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Impact on Children Lack of bonding time for infants Kids go to day care sick. Kids send themselves to school sick. Health and learning problems become disabilities.
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What’s at Stake for Low-Wage Workers High cost of being poor Ability to keep a job, build assets Well-being of children and families – job churning contributes to highest child poverty rate in industrialized world
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Guarantee for All Some smart employers will do this on their own. Not all – like asking 2-year-olds to determine when they need a time out.
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Solutions: Public Policy Changes Family Flexibility Make leave more accessible Make leave more affordable Guarantee paid sick days Keep consideration for chronic conditions Expand definition of family
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Multi-State Working Families Consortium Eight state coalitions: California, Georgia, Maine, Massachusetts, New York, New Jersey, Washington and Wisconsin Collaborating for more effective action, raise public awareness.
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Where We Are Now: Opportunities Reframe the Debate Values: caring, responsibility, opportunity Who really values families Put kids in the center rather than the fringes.
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Making Progress in the States Winning forms of paid leave expanding TDI to include family leave: California New Jersey New York creating new form of social insurance: Washington Massachusetts
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Making Progress in the States Making progress on guaranteeing protection: Sick days: San Francisco, Madison Massachusetts All of us Family Care: Maine FMLA for school/day care activities: Georgia Wisconsin
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Increased Collaboration Connecting the dots: Labor. Women. Children’s groups. Progressive employers. Family physicians. Faith-based. Disabilities groups. Chronic disease. Alzheimers Associations. AIDS groups. Mental health organizations. PTAs. Principals. School boards. Social workers. Cities/counties groups. Citizen Action. Welfare rights/anti- poverty groups. Aging groups. Foster children. Work- family researchers. Legal groups. Parents of adult disabled. Adoption groups. Immigrant advocates. Groups in communities of color. Human Rights groups. Non-profit associations. Insurers. Women’s business associations. AAUW. YWCA. Planned Parenthood. MomsRising
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Lay the groundwork for policy change. Redefining issues – linking what happens to kids, families with what happens to parents at work. New Opportunities
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