Wednesday, October 19, 2016

Ask WPVI: Where do our Senate candidates stand on paid leave?

As we get closer to the election, do you know where candidates stand on what matters to you?

On October 24, WPVI will host the second and final debate between Senate candidates Pat Toomey and Katie McGinty. We'd like them to ask a question about paid leave, and we need your help!

Here are some tweets you can share, or you can submit questions directly at JoinTheAction@6abc.com:
  • Plz ask candidates Monday if they support #paidfamilyleave for every American, no matter their gender or job? #6abcAction #WeWontWait2016
  • What will you do to make sure all workers have access to #paidfamilyleave? #WeWontWait2016 #AsktheCandidates #6abcAction
  • How can you ensure workers don’t have to choose btwn paying bills/caring for family when sick? #WeWontWait2016 #AsktheCandidates #6abcAction
  • 40% of workers can't use FMLA; others can't afford to be unpaid caregivers. What can you do? #WeWontWait2016 #AsktheCandidates #6abcAction
  • Doctor says "stay home"; worker can't afford being fired/losing pay. What's your advice? #WeWontWait2016 #AsktheCandidates #6abcAction
  • Do you support the Healthy Families Act to ensure all workers have access to #paidsickdays? #WeWontWait2016 #AsktheCandidates #6abcAction
Here's a few questions that are too long to tweet but great for email!
  • The vast majority of US workers lack paid family leave, and that impacts families' finances, job opportunities and savings as well as the broader economy. What will you do to make sure all working women and men have access to paid family and medical leave?
  • I live in Pennsylvania, but my friend in New Jersey has access to paid sick days/paid family leave. Do you think that’s fair? What are your plans to fix this?

Friday, September 16, 2016

Josh's Story – Paid Leave and Bonding

I'm the father of two kids, a 5 month old (Abby) and an almost five year old (Bela). When Abby was born, I was incredibly blessed to receive two months paid time off from Meetup, where I work as a software engineer. For my first daughter, Bela, I was given a week paid time off (which I was grateful for) but we decided to spend through our savings so I could take a few months leave.

I always tell other dads that taking that initial time off to bond and learn together with the new baby was one of the best decisions I ever made. That initial time is just so important — not just for bonding and emotional understanding, but for feeling like an equal and competent parent and being in tune with what’s going on with your lil’ one! I feel like it gave me a critical and deep foundation for parenting that I’m incredibly grateful for.

Everyone needs paid family leave so they can have the same opportunity.

Wednesday, September 7, 2016

Join Our Campaign for Paid Family Leave!

The PA Coalition for Healthy Families and Workplaces (led by PathWays PA and the Women and Girls Foundation) is beginning a statewide campaign to secure paid family leave for all workers across the commonwealth - and we want you to be involved!

Please fill out the form below to show your support for the campaign. We look forward to working with you to engage women and men across this state in this important campaign to support workers, businesses, and families. You can also share this link with other organizations who you think should be involved.

We hope you will join us at 2 PM on October 4, 2016, for our first all-coalition conference call! Please email Emma@wgfpa.org if you are able to attend.

https://goo.gl/forms/D9Jm9ObJCUlDtWBs1

Why Paid Family and Medical Leave is a Growing Priority for Small Business


Register here!

Small business owners spend their days concentrating on their particular specialties, but there's one thing they have in common: they all have to contend with a host of similar workforce issues. One topic making big news lately is paid family and medical leave. This event will include a panel of local business leaders to discuss specific policy proposals under consideration at the national level and how they will impact small businesses. We also will hear stories from local small employers who support these policies.


Winnie Stachelberg, Vice President Center for American Progress (Moderator)
Ken Weinstein, Owner Trolley Car Diner
Mercy Mosquera, Owner Tierra Colombiana
Joseph Gidjunis, Owner of JPG Photography
Marianne Bellesorte, Vice President of Advocacy, PathWays PA

A question and answer period will follow the discussion.

Register here!

Wednesday, July 13, 2016

Pennsylvania Poll Shows Strong Public Support for a National Paid Family and Medical Leave Fund and Elected Officials Who Champion Working Families Policies

Pennsylvania - New public opinion survey results from Pennsylvania released today show strong voter support for new national policies that support working families, echoing national trends.

"The breadth of support is welcome but not surprising news," said Marianne Bellesorte, Vice President of Advocacy at PathWays PA. "Access to paid family leave helps spur our economy while keeping families safe. Financial protection for working families, whether they have a new baby or a new cancer diagnosis, is long overdue."

Sixty percent of surveyed Pennsylvanians said it is likely that they would face significant economic hardship if they had to take time from their job to deal with a serious illness, to care for a new child or to care for a family member with a serious illness. Sixty-eight percent strongly or somewhat support a proposed law guaranteeing that working people in the U.S. can earn up to seven paid sick days each year from their employer to use if they or a family member has a routine illness like the flu or needs to see a doctor.

By a nearly two-to-one margin, 61 percent of voters in the 15 states that were polled support the creation of a national paid family and medical leave fund, 69 percent support a paid sick days law and 57 percent support increasing access to high-quality affordable child care.

Commissioned by the 15 national organizations that make up the Work Family Strategy Council, these new results provide further evidence of the strong public demand for policies that help people manage family and work responsibilities.

Surveys were conducted among 9,611 registered voters between July 7-10 in Arizona, Colorado, Florida, Georgia, Iowa, Minnesota, Nevada, New Hampshire, North Carolina, Ohio, Oregon, Pennsylvania, Virginia, Washington and Wisconsin and the results were aggregated and averaged across the states. Key findings from the aggregated data include:

  • Voters across states say they favor a law that would create a national paid family and medical leave fund: 61 percent say they favor such a law, 44 percent say they strongly favor one, and only 34 percent express any opposition.
  • Support for paid family and medical leave spans political parties: 84 percent of Democrats, 50 percent of Independents and 42 percent of Republicans say they favor a national paid family and medical leave fund.
  • A strong majority of people surveyed say they face challenges when managing job, family and personal responsibilities: 63 percent of full-time workers and 67 percent of part-time workers say they would be likely to face significant economic hardship if they had to take time off without pay to care for a new child, care for a seriously ill loved one, or deal with their own serious health issue.
  • Voters in all 15 states say they would be more likely to vote for an elected official or candidate who supports creating a paid family and medical leave fund.
  • Voters also strongly support establishing a national paid sick days standard and increased access to high-quality, affordable child care: 69 percent say they favor a law that would guarantee all workers the right to earn paid sick days from their employers; only 28 percent express opposition. Additionally, 57 percent say they favor increased access to high-quality, affordable child care; 35 percent express opposition.

"Our nation prides itself on having strong family values, yet we are the only developed nation in the world without paid family leave. The polling data confirms Americans want the ability to take care of their families while remaining in the workforce. Family Leave Insurance Funds provide a way for workers to care for their families while keeping our economy on track," said Heather Arnet, CEO of the Women and Girls Foundation located in Southwest Pennsylvania.

"Of course there's broad support for paid leave," said Terry L. Fromson, Managing Attorney of the Women's Law Project. "Paid leave benefits both families and employers. People need to be able to care for babies and sick family members without being pushed out of the workforce, which is, unfortunately, what happens to women in particular."

Despite the nearly universal challenges people face trying to balance the demands of job and family, only 12 percent of private sector workers in the United States have access to paid family leave through their employers, and only 61 percent have access to paid sick days. For lower-wage workers, access to paid time off to use for family and medical needs is even rarer. The new data suggest voters strongly favor changing these realities.

"It would have meant everything to have paid family leave, or for my husband to have it now," said Jessica Karabian, a Southampton, PA, mother with stage IV cancer. "We wouldn't have to worry so much about cutting things for our daughter. Eloise is 3, but she can't go to preschool because we have to pay medical bills. I just don't you think you should have to go bankrupt because you're sick."

FULL RESULTS for each state are available: ArizonaColoradoFloridaGeorgiaIowaMinnesotaNevadaNew HampshireNorth CarolinaOhioOregonPennsylvaniaVirginiaWashington, or Wisconsin or see the 15-State Aggregate.

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About The Coalition for Healthy Families and Workplaces: The Coalition for Healthy Families and Workplaces is made up of a group o organizations supporting the need for earned sick time in Philadelphia and Pennsylvania.

About The Women's Law Project: Founded in 1974, the Women's Law Project is the only public interest law center in Pennsylvania devoted to advancing the rights of women and girls.

About The Women and Girls Foundation: The Women and Girls Foundation is a non-profit community based organization in Southwest Pennsylvania. The mission of the Women and Girls Foundation (www.wgfpa.org) is to achieve equality for women and girls, now and for generations to come.

About The Work Family Strategy Council: The Work Family Strategy Council is a collaborative of 15 national organizations dedicated to promoting policies that help ensure all working people can care for themselves and their loved ones without jeopardizing their jobs or economic security. The groups are experts on paid family and medical leave, paid sick days and other issues of importance to working families, and they are driving successful organizing and advocacy efforts to secure policy changes at the local, state and national levels. Together, the council's work improves life for millions of people across the country.

Member organizations are: 9to5; A Better Balance; Black Women's Roundtable of the National Coalition on Black Civic Participation; Center for American Progress; Center for Economic and Policy Research; Center for Law and Social Policy; Family Values @ Work; Institute for Women's Policy Research; Labor Project for Working Families, in partnership with Family Values @ Work; Make It Work Campaign; MomsRising; National Domestic Workers Alliance; National Partnership for Women & Families; National Women's Law Center; and Restaurant Opportunities Centers United.

Jessica's Story - Why We Need Paid Family Leave

In August 2013, I found a lump in my breast. It came out of nowhere. I have no family history, I don’t have the BRCA gene. But, at age 29, I had an eight month old baby - and stage II breast cancer.

Over the next six months, I took FMLA and (unpaid) administrative leave from my work so I could juggle treatment and motherhood. After six rounds of chemo, a bilateral mastectomy, and 6 weeks of radiation treatment, I returned to work – only to learn three months later that the cancer had spread to my bones. My company said I needed to wait at least another three months to be able to use FMLA again, but that was time I didn’t have. After going back on administrative leave, I was later forced to terminate my employment.

I’m coming up now on my two years since my second diagnosis. My cancer has stayed in my bones, which is good, but with Stage IV cancer, treatment is always changing. I’m at the hospital for chemo every three weeks, plus scans, plus doctor’s appointments – it’s been impossible to go back to work. I get Social Security, but it is not nearly what I was making before. My husband works, but living on one income is almost impossible in this country. And he doesn’t get any paid sick days, so it’s very hard for him to take time to help me when I am sick.

Being younger and having this happen to you – we never had a chance to build up a savings account or 401K. We were planning to buy a house, and we had to use all those savings for medical bills. Sometimes it feels like we are totally scrambling and losing everything because of something I couldn’t control.

It would have meant everything to have paid family leave, or for my husband to have it now. We wouldn’t have to worry so much about cutting things for our daughter. Eloise is 3, but she can’t go to preschool because we have to pay medical bills. If my job had paid family leave, maybe I wouldn’t have had to choose between treatment and my job. I wanted to find a way to continue to work. Even if I had paid family leave just that first time I was diagnosed, maybe we would have had enough money to buy a house. We could have had child care. Our savings could still be intact.

People ask me all the time “Well, don’t you have insurance?” They don’t realize that you’re still paying out of pocket for lots of tests, lots of treatment, and a lot of your time is spent out of work and in doctor’s offices. Insurance is great, but it can only take you so far. I want to work, not to be on disability. I want to have the option of maintaining a normal life while living with chronic – yes, eventually it will be terminal, but so far it’s been chronic – illness. I would love to continue to work because my family would be in a much different financial situation and I had a really good job.

I just don’t you think you should have to go bankrupt because you’re sick.