Welcome to Pregnancy Guide
Mimi Maternity Article
. For a permanent link to this article, or to bookmark it for further reading, click here.
You may also listen to this article by using the following controls.
The Basics About Maternity Leave
from:The United States is the only industrialized country besides Australia that doesn’t provide paid maternity leave for new mothers nationally.
According to a Harvard University study of 168 nations, 163 had some form of paid maternity leave. This means that the United States in the company of Lesotho, Papua New Guinea and Swaziland when it comes to providing paid leave for pregnant women.
No one really knows why this is the case, although some professors and experts claim that the difference in European and American feminist movement goals could have contributed to the lack of paid maternity leave for mothers in the United States.
In Europe the early feminists emphasized special treatment for mothers, including maternity leave. American early feminists downplayed motherhood, wanted equal rights for women, and no special treatment.
There has been some effort put into introducing paid maternity leave in the United States. The Clinton administration wanted to let states use unemployment fund to supply paid maternity leaves. But opposition from business groups resulted in this plan being shot down by the Bush administration. Businesses argued that they’d have to increase their contributions to state unemployment funds.
In 2004 California introduced a family leave (meaning either paternity or maternity leave) with around 50 percent pay for six weeks. The money came from a fund paid into by employees, not employers.
Currently there are five states – California, Hawaii, New Jersey, New York and Rhode Island – that have temporary disability programs that require employers to pay benefits if the pregnancy is defined as a disability by a doctor.
Almost every state allows a woman to have unpaid maternity leave. You’ll qualify for unpaid leave if you:
Work for the federal government, a state or local government, or any company that has 50 or more employees working within 75 miles of your workplace
Have worked for your employer for at least 12 months and for at least 1,250 hours during the previous year (an average of 25 hours per week for 50 weeks).
Employers are not required to keep your job open for you when you return if you’re in the highest-paid 10 percent of wage earners in your company and if your employer can show that your absence would cause substantial economic harm to the organization.
Unpaid maternity leave can be used in any way you want during your pregnancy and up to a year after your child is born. This means you can take it all at once or spread it out over your child’s first year by reducing your normal weekly or daily work schedule, if your employer agrees.
Federal guidelines require you to request leave at least 30 days before you plan to take it. But it’s a good idea to let your boss know you’re pregnant well before that.
Mimi Maternity News
Desination Maternity sales slip on site closings - Philadelphia Business Journal
Maternity-wear retailer Destination Maternity Corp. said Thursday that its sales last month dropped by 9 percent. Sales at the company (NASDAQ:DEST), which was formerly known as Mothers Work, totaled $45.6 million, down from $50.3 million a year ...
Read more...Destination Maternity Corporation to Present at the ICR XChange ... - PR Newswire
PHILADELPHIA, Jan. 7 /PRNewswire-FirstCall/ -- Destination Maternity Corporation (NASDAQ: DEST) , the world's leading maternity apparel retailer, today announced that Ed Krell, Chief Executive Officer, and Rebecca Matthias, President and Chief ...
Read more...Destination Maternity Corporation to Present at Cowen's Consumer ... - PR Newswire
PHILADELPHIA, Jan. 7 /PRNewswire-FirstCall/ -- Destination Maternity Corporation (NASDAQ: DEST) , the world's leading maternity apparel retailer, today announced that Ed Krell, Chief Executive Officer, Rebecca Matthias, President and Chief Creative ...
Read more...ss dd from Vancouver, Canada writes: - Globe and Mail
Anne D from Canada writes: I can't believe this. As a woman, I am ashamed. There is nothing wrong with supporting an exwife of many traditional years who is not capable of supporting themselves, but this case again proves that the divorice justice ...
Read more...




