Roundtables seek input on paid leave bill
DOVER - As activist
The phrase "could have been useful" was something Ms. Brown-Clarke repeated when recounting times in her life that she and her family needed paid leave - like when she was hospitalized after the birth of her second child, but her husband did not have the option of taking off work to be with her.
Or when her grandmother was diagnosed with dementia and she was the only family member able to take an extended leave of absence from her job to care for her.
"It's time for us to make a change," Ms. Brown-Clarke said. "I believe when we know better, we do better, so let's get this passed."
Introduced by Sen.
If approved, SB 1 would create a family and medical trust modeled after similar programs already passed in nine states and
The second roundtable was held Wednesday at the Modern Maturity Center in Dover. It follows a roundtable in
Among the benefits of paid leave
A state insurance program, she said, helps small businesses that might not be able to offer benefits like larger corporations are able to pay for.
State Treasurer
"It makes it so that we can attract, as small business owners, we can attract talented, young, invigorated people as well as seasoned, experienced and amazing employees,"
State Insurance Commissioner
On a personal note,
"Eventually, when we found out that his cancer was terminal, paid leave policies allowed us to be there for one another in those final few days,"
"That status quo is not only unsustainable, it is cruel," she said.
The Rev.
"Their bodies had not had time to completely heal because they were in employment where they didn't have that much time off or didn't have paid medical leave," she said. "I saw some of the mental impacts, the emotional impacts, how it set some of them in depression."
Dr.
She added
She said paid leave is important in ensuring mothers get adequate postpartum care, as well.
"Having access to postpartum care is also essential, as more than one half of pregnancy-related deaths do occur in this postpartum period,"
"There's a growing body of research that shows that mothers from racial and ethnic minority groups are less likely to take leave from work due to discrimination in hiring practices that often leave them occupying lower-paying jobs - that don't offer paid leave, sick or otherwise, as a benefit,"
She said despite higher rates of illness and death among Black women, many opt out of necessary treatment in order to continue working.
She said providing access to a state paid leave program can lessen potential financial burden on families.
"Without access to paid family leave, families face financial hardships or risk losing their jobs if they have to take time off to address significant caregiver needs," she said.
He said municipalities that already had programs in place last year, saw fewer COVID-19 positive employees. That's because people would take off work, using paid leave, when they felt sick rather than coming into work even if they were symptomatic.
"In public health, we want to be about prevention. We want to break cycles,"
Staff writer
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