For Mother’s Day: Mom deserves flowers – and paid sick days

Via Washington Policy Watch:

– Alex Stone, Communications Manager, EOI

In my family, Mother’s Day usually includes an assortment of flowers, cards, candy and family time spent over sit-down meal. After all, Mother’s Day is an important day to honor and thank mom for all she’s done.

As a child, my mother always packed my lunch, helped my sister and I with our homework – and stayed home from work when we were sick. I didn’t realize it at the time, but now I know just how hard that part was.

See, my mom had no paid sick days at her job – and because my middle class family depended on two incomes, her paycheck was critical to making ends meet. When my mom missed work because my sister or I was sick, it had a direct impact on our family’s budget.

Of course, the juggling act of work and family wasn’t unique to my family then, and isn’t unique now – in fact, millions of working parents across America are still unable to take a paid sick day when they or their child gets sick.

Continue reading “For Mother’s Day: Mom deserves flowers – and paid sick days”

Seattle paid sick days campaign featured in Publicola – they need your comments pronto!

Via the Seattle Coalition for a Healthy Workforce:

Publicola has a great story on the campaign to ensure all workers in Seattle have paid sick days – but they’re already seeing comments from a few people who think responsible, healthy prevention should take a back seat to personal profit.

They need your comments in support of paid sick days right away, so they can continue making the case. Please click here now to read the article and leave your comment!

Also, be sure to turn on King 5 News tonight a 6:30 for interviews and news on the Seattle paid sick days campaign!

Equal Pay Day highlights earnings gap for women, need for paid sick days

Via Washington Policy Watch:

Today is Equal Pay Day, which each year highlights the continuing disparity between men’s and women’s earnings. This disparity, commonly known as the ‘wage gap‘, shows just how far we still have to go to achieve gender equity.

Despite making modest gains in hourly earnings, women earn less than men in every sector of the economy, and at every age. From 1990 to 2009, Washington women’s average monthly earnings compared to men’s actually declined from 68% to 63%. In 2009, Washington women on average made $1,815 per month less than men.

As Ellen Bravo points out in a recent article, some argue that the wage gap exists because women – who bear the primary responsibility for providing care to children and older parents – trade income for flexibility. But there’s a flaw in this argument: typically, the lowest paying jobs have the least flexibility – and no paid sick days to cover illnesses or emergencies.

Forward progress for women in the workforce has largely stalled over the past two decades because workplace standards remain mired in outdated assumptions that most workers are men and most families have a full-time caregiver at home. Among Washington’s private sector workforce in 2009, just 41% of firms offered paid sick leave to full time employees, and just 14% offered the benefit to part-time employees.

A critical piece of the pay equity puzzle includes employer recognition of changing family structures. Now more than ever, families rely on two incomes to get by – and women’s earnings are critical to family economic security. But employer practices and benefits often to don’t recognize these changes – and penalize female employees for taking time away from work for maternity leave, to care for sick children, or provide care for an elderly relative.

New legislation that enforces modern workplace standards, protects family care giving roles, and supports early learning and care is needed for women to make the next leap toward gender equality. Without reliable access to paid family leave, paid sick days, and affordable, quality childcare and preschool, career opportunities and earning potential will continue to be limited for the majority of women.

Our children, families, businesses, and communities all pay the price for our failure to step up to the public policy needs of today’s working women.