18 Jul Paid Leave is an Investment in Working Families
ApproximatelyΒ 87 percent of workersΒ receive no paid family leave, a problem that BCTGM and other advocates for working families have been pushing elected officials to address for years. The issue finally emerged as a policy focus in last yearβs presidential elections.
In a July 10Β letter to the president, more than 100 congressional Democrats urged President Donald Trump to supportΒ legislationΒ providing working families with 12 weeks of paid family and medical leave βthat is sustainable, affordable, and inclusive.β They noted that Trumpβs 2018 budget request β which includes a paid family leave provision β βis inadequate because it only provides six weeks of paid leave for limited circumstances and without a solid funding mechanism.β
Democratic lawmakers also wrote that Trumpβs plan is βinconsistent with the 12-week national standardβ set by current federal law. That law, theΒ Family and Medical Leave Act (FMLA), requires an employer to provide up to 12 weeks of family leave β but unpaid.
The letter also points out Trumpβs plan limits paid leave to birth or adoption. Yet, under current law, justification for family leave includes putting a child up for adoption or foster care, caring for a spouse, child or parent with a βserious health condition that makes the employee unable to perform the essential functions of his or her job,β or qualifying emergency of a covered family member on βcovered active duty.β
In a recentΒ articleΒ forΒ The Wall Street Journal, the presidentβs daughter, Ivanka Trump, a White House advisor, called paid family leave βan investment in Americaβs working families.β
The BCTGM agrees that providing paid family leave is an investment in Americaβs working families. However, President Trumpβs plan for six weeks of limited paid family leave falls far short of what most working families need.