Utah gets D- grade for paid parental leave
Nation as a whole doesn't do so well on report, either
While many received an outright F, Utah received a more generous D- because state employees may be granted up to 12 months of unpaid medical leave including leave for pregnancy disability or recovery from childbirth if a health care provider certifies temporary disability.
The report, "Expecting Better: A State By State Analysis of Parental Leave Policies," was compiled by the National Partnership for Women & Families, a nonprofit, nonpartisan advocacy group that works to promote fairness in the workplace and quality health care.
Its release was timed to accompany the nation's attention directed at Mother's Day, which is Sunday.
"Here in Utah, we could do much better," said Karen Crompton, executive director of Voices for Utah Children. "For Mother's Day, Utah's moms need more than hearts and flowers: They need measures that will allow them to take time with new babies."
Points were awarded in a variety of categories to determine how family-friendly state policies and private sector practices are to working parents.
Rather, companies tend to rely on job protection guarantees provided by the Family Medical and Leave Act, which guarantees unpaid leave to qualified workers.
The survey looked at legislation, state by state, that goes beyond the FMLA such as family-friendly laws that provide for paid leave. No states earned an A and only one state, California, earned an A-, in part because of a law on its books which provides working parents with up to six weeks of paid leave to care for a newborn, newly adopted or foster care child.
Workers also can tap into flexible sick leave to care for a spouse or domestic partner who is temporarily disabled due to pregnancy or recovery from childbirth.
Sen. Ed Mayne, D-West Valley, head of the Utah chapter of the AFL-CIO, said he finds the lack of compensated parental leave pay reprehensible.
"We are behind on a lot of things . . . It's very concerning for a state like Utah that puts family on its list of high priorities to not provide compensation for a woman having a baby," Mayne said.
Utah's grim standings didn't really surprise Nancy Mitchell, executive director of the Women's Business Center at the Salt Lake Chamber of Commerce.
"I certainly empathize with women and men who aren't granted parental leave. I think it is really important," she said. "It just boggles my mind. Here we are a state that respects and values families, but still we have so many policies that are anti-family. I think this is an area we could do so much more in."
And while Utah and the majority of states were slammed in the report, the nation as a whole didn't escape criticism.
The report cited a 2004 Harvard University study of 168 countries that found 163 guarantee paid leave to women in connection with childbirth. 45 guarantee paid paternity leave or parental leave.
The United States joins Australia as the only two industrialized nations in the world which do not provide some sort of paid leave to new parents.
The report can be found at www.nationalpartnership.org.
E-mail: amyjoi@desnews.com




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