Government-funded paid parental leave would more than double in length, and the amount paid to parents would jump substantially, under new recommendations handed to the federal government.
That is why it should also be equally available to fathers/partners on a “use it or lose it” basis. The “risk” of parental leave becomes even between men and women, thus one reason for hiring discrimination is removed.
This is about government funded leave, which as far as I know already is paid to the “primary care giver” and not to the mother.
Also, a reduced amount (same amount of money, but for less time - effectively just when the baby is a newborn) is available for the secondary care giver.
Where we got burned with that is the funding is means tested and based on an estimate of your income. When we actually did our tax a year later… it turned out we were not eligible. So I’d taken unpaid leave from my job and then was later forced to pay the government back all of the money that they gave me during those weeks.
If/when we have a second kid, I don’t think I’ll risk applying for government funded leave. I’ll just use my annual leave or something and deal with going a year or three without any actual break from work.
Probably. I mean, that’s definitely illegal, but if they don’t explicitly say that’s why they’re not hiring you, I doubt anything would ever come of it
Doesn’t this mean workplaces will be less likely to hire women of a particular age lest they have to pay out a years salary?
Just seems that corps aren’t going to just agree to this because of their sense of “fairness”.
That is why it should also be equally available to fathers/partners on a “use it or lose it” basis. The “risk” of parental leave becomes even between men and women, thus one reason for hiring discrimination is removed.
This is about government funded leave, which as far as I know already is paid to the “primary care giver” and not to the mother.
Also, a reduced amount (same amount of money, but for less time - effectively just when the baby is a newborn) is available for the secondary care giver.
Where we got burned with that is the funding is means tested and based on an estimate of your income. When we actually did our tax a year later… it turned out we were not eligible. So I’d taken unpaid leave from my job and then was later forced to pay the government back all of the money that they gave me during those weeks.
If/when we have a second kid, I don’t think I’ll risk applying for government funded leave. I’ll just use my annual leave or something and deal with going a year or three without any actual break from work.
Probably. I mean, that’s definitely illegal, but if they don’t explicitly say that’s why they’re not hiring you, I doubt anything would ever come of it