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- Path: sparky!uunet!noc.near.net!mv!bass!hern!brighid
- From: brighid@hern.stonemarche.org
- Newsgroups: misc.kids
- Subject: SUMMARY: Maternity leave policies
- Message-ID: <1992Dec29.221522.2062@hern.stonemarche.org>
- Date: 29 Dec 92 22:15:22 EST
- Organization: Hern the Hunter, Stonemarche (NH)
- Lines: 98
-
- This is also a late summary, though not much to report. A while
- ago I asked for information on maternity leaves - time, benefit
- continuation, etc. The e-mail responses I received are below.
-
- I did go and remind my manager that I _was_ in fact pregnant and would
- be needing a maternity leave. I don't think it had really been on
- his list of things to think about. He told me that I could have 3
- months or however much time I needed and that they would definitely
- hold my job. He also said that he would like to be on the high side of
- the benefits equation. So that's good. As long as the company a)
- survives and b) can afford to give me some partial salary, life will
- be good.
-
- Thanks to everyone who posted to the net. I assume that anyone who was
- interested read the posts then.
-
- Brighid Mom-to-be in May of 93!
-
- ------------
- I work for a BIG organization (State of Wisconsin) and I'll let you
- know what they offer so you can use it as an example. For maternity
- leave you can take up to 6 months unpaid leave and your boss can't
- say no. You can take up to 3 years unpaid leave, but your boss has
- to agree. You can take 6 weeks of this time as paid leave using
- accumulated sick leave time, and up to 6 more weeks as paid sick
- leave if you have a medical problem and your Dr. writes you a note.
- You can also take any accumulated vacation that you have coming if
- you want.
- For sick leave the State of WI gives full time people 13 days per
- year paid. This can be accumulated virtually forever, so lots of
- people have hundreds of days accumulated. If you work part time the
- leave is pro-rated to match the time you work.
- After you return to work, you manage days off for Dr. visits and
- sick child care as if you yourself were sick - by taking sick leave
- that you have accumulated. There is no child care support, except
- that the State will let you save money in a special account that is
- pre-tax dollars in order to pay for child care, so you save the
- amount you'ld pay in taxes on that money.
- Hope this info. helps. By the way, I am due on 5/8/93 and am
- terribly excited! We have 2 children (both were adopted), and my
- pregnancy is so unexpected and wonderful!
- I work part time (3 days/week) and this amount suits me well. YOu
- might consider part-time work after the baby is born.
- Good luck to you! My advice is to lay out what other employers do,
- and decide for yourself which plan makes sense and then present that
- to your boss with your ideas on which way is best. Sounds like they
- will be receptive to your input.
-
- ------------
- I work at a large university/government laboratory. We are allowed to
- take our sick leave and vacation as maternity leave if our supervisor
- approves. The other option is leave-without-pay. We do get "partial
- sick leave" for days when there is a doctor appointment, and it does
- not count against our sick leave.
-
- I doubt if your co-workers will be understanding. Some of mine are and
- some aren't. I make sure everyone knows well ahead-of-time when I will
- be absent. (Except in cases like this week when my sitter's brother
- died.) Actually, I have found that the older men with families and
- even those with stay-at-home wives are somewhat more understanding than
- the younger childless men.
-
- You are doing the right thing to establish a policy for your company.
- Any policy is better than having no idea what to expect.
-
- ------------
- My company is 25 people and had no policy either. They made one
- when I got pregnant. I knew they couldn't afford anything like
- these big companies do, so we agreed that I could get extra time
- off, but that it would be unpaid.
-
- ------------
- We can take up to 6 months of leave and still be guaranteed a job when we
- return. It will not necessarily be the same job as when we left. I can't
- afford a leave of absence and don't have much sick leave and vacation time
- saved up so I'll be out just 6 weeks. In order to make sure I'll have the
- same job when I get back, I find someone willing, train him, and have him
- take my responsibilities while I'm out. Last time it was someone whose
- research money was running out for one FY, and I returned near the beginning
- of the next FY when he had $ again, so he was glad to give me back my job.
- This time my job doesn't have many day-to-day responsibilities (Cassini
- doesn't launch until 1996 or 7) so we are able to work my schedule around
- my expected leave.
-
- I think it is your responsibility to make sure your company will have done
- for it what you usually do while you are out. That may mean hiring a
- contractor to come in for the length of time you will be gone, if what
- you do is critical to the day-to-day operation of the company. Then you
- should train the contractor before you leave so that things run smoothly
- until you return.
-
- If the work you do can be put on hold for the length of your leave, make sure
- to get it in writing from your boss that you will return to exactly the
- same job you left if you return within a specified amount of time. Then
- you won't have any confusion.
-
- -------------------
- End of Summary
-