A new report by Human Rights Watch, "Failing its Families: Lack of Paid Leave and Work-Family Supports in the U.S.," finds that U.S. women desperately need paid leave laws, breastfeeding accommodations, and laws barring discrimination against workers with families. The lack of paid leave and protective laws for workers disproportionately affects women and their children. Many of the working women interviewed by Human Rights Watch said that their careers were derailed as a result of employer bias against women with family responsibilities. Many also recounted problems with postpartum depression and noted that they the lack of workplace breastfeeding accommodations forced them to give up the practice early.
"Failing its Families" demonstrates that existing legal protections do not fully protect working women and their families. The federal Family and Medical Leave Act (FMLA) allows U.S. workers with new children or severely ill family members to take unpaid, job-protected leave, but the FMLA covers only half the workforce. Only 11% of civilian workers (and 3% of the lowest-income workers) have paid family leave benefits. Roughly two-thirds of civilian workers have some paid sick leave, but only about a fifth of low-income workers do. And studies show that the number of employers voluntarily offering paid family leave is declining.
As Legal Momentum has testified, the United States has much less generous parental leave than other rich countries and far less public support for child care. Notably, countries with paid leave policies also have higher levels of economic competitiveness compared to the United States.
Legal Momentum has long advocated for paid leave and workplace family supports. Learn more about Legal Momentum's advocacy for working women.
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