Showing posts with label equal pay. Show all posts
Showing posts with label equal pay. Show all posts

Tuesday, May 15, 2018

LIFT UP Pennsylvania Parents and Families on May 22!

PathWays PA and the Coalition for Healthy Families and Workplaces are proud co-sponsors of this event! Please join us on May 22 in Harrisburg!

Help us bring some parent power to Harrisburg on Tuesday May 22! Whether you’re a parent or ever had one, it’s time to speak out! In celebration of Mother’s Day, we're calling on PA legislators to LIFT UP Pennsylvania parents and families!

Join us to:

  • shine a light on the importance of paid leave, equal pay, minimum wage, and supporting pregnant and breastfeeding parents in the workplace. and
  • bring forward challenges in our immigration and justice systems that have dire impacts on parents and families, and most especially on communities of color, including gun safety, the school-to-prison pipeline and maternal justice.


Are you a parent or caregiver, ever had a parent, or just like parents? Then bring yourself, your friends, and / or your group to join the action. Here's the plan for the day:

  • 11am on the capitol steps: We're reading messages from parents across the commonwealth, and flying kites!
  • 12pm: Rally and Press Conference in the main rotunda
  • 1pm: Dropping off materials and messages (on kites!) to legislator offices.

This is a great and impactful way to make your voice heard. Everyone is welcome, whether you're a new advocate or old pro. Bring your kids, grandparents, neighbor or coworkers. We'll have lunch and shirts (but you need to RSVP to be guaranteed either) RSVP here -https://action.momsrising.org/survey/PA_May22/

See you there!!

Wednesday, October 31, 2012

The Elephant in the Room-The Gender Gap, Women's Wages and Politics

The U.S. ranks a low 22nd among nations, according to the 2012 Global Gender Gap Index, which measures the gap between men and women in four categories: economic participation and opportunity, educational attainment, health and survival, and political empowerment.

Women's wages in the U.S. are stuck at 77 cents to a man's dollar for full-time year round work, with mothers and women of color experiencing a gap that's larger still. The U.S. ranks a low 80th of all nations in terms of women's representation in our national legislature. Only four percent of the Fortune 500 CEOs are women. The U.S. lags behind more than 150 other nations on paid family leave and earned sick days policies, both of which are critical to the economic security of women and their families.

Read the full Article Here
by Kristin Rowe-Finkbeiner

Monday, August 29, 2011

The U.S. Department of Labor Women's Bureau invites you to its Women's Economic Security Forum: Promoting Equal Pay, Workplace Flexibility, and Resources for Women Owned Businesses


The U.S. Department of Labor Women’s Bureau invites you to its Women’s Economic Security Forum: Promoting Equal Pay, Workplace Flexibility, and Resources for Women Owned Businesses

Monday, September 12, 2011
8:00 a.m. to 12 p.m.
Papadakis Integrated Sciences Building at Drexel University (located at the corner of 33rd and Chestnut St.)

The event is free and open to the public.

REGISTER TODAY AT: http://equalpay.eventbrite.com/
Questions? Please contact Rose Holandez at holandez.rose@dol.gov

Participating agencies and organizations: U.S. Equal Employment Opportunity Commission, U.S. Small Business Administration, U.S. Department of Labor Office of Federal Contract and Compliance Programs, Drexel University, PathWays PA

Wednesday, April 13, 2011

New Article: Women Workers' Advocates Push for Sick Days

Yesterday morning, national and Philadelphia experts on working women briefed members of the news media about why having paid sick days is especially important for working women.

Ellen Bravo, Professor of Women’s Studies at the University of Wisconsin and Executive Director of Family Values @ Work participated in the briefing.

Bravo said, “Women will never see equal pay until they stop being punished for being caregivers. That means policies such as paid sick days, that help women stay employed and have steady earnings.”

To read the whole story, please visit The Philadelphia Daily Record.

Tuesday, April 12, 2011

Listen to Today's Earned Sick Days/ Equal Pay Press Conference Online!

This Equal Pay Day, please take the time to hear how the need for earned sick days impacts pay inequity in the workplace.  Please share with your friends, and call your City Council members to let them know how important earned sick days are to all families!

Why Earned Sick Days Matter For Working Women and Families

Contact:
Lauren Townsend 215-939-7621 (c)
Philadelphia Earned Sick Days Campaign


WHY EARNED SICK DAYS MATTER FOR WORKING WOMEN AND FAMILIES

Ellen Bravo: “ Women will never see equal pay until they stop being punished for being caregivers ”

This morning, national and Philadelphia experts on working women briefed members of the news media about why having paid sick days is especially important for working women.

Ellen Bravo, Professor of Women’s Studies at the University of Wisconsin and Executive Director of Family Values @ Work participated in the briefing.

Bravo said, “Women will never see equal pay until they stop being punished for being caregivers. That means policies such as paid sick days, that help women stay employed and have steady earnings.”

Bravo stressed that working mothers often jeopardize their economic wellbeing when they take time off to care for a sick child or elderly parent and do not have paid sick days.

The conference call was moderated by Carol Goertzel, CEO of PathWays PA, who is a founding member of Coalition for Healthy Families and Workplaces that is pressing for the passage of an Earned Sick Days bill in Philadelphia City Council.

Katherine Black, Director of Health and Safety at the American Federation of State County and Municipal Employees District Council 47 and President of the Philadelphia Chapter of the Coalition of Labor Union Women, said, “The fact that women's wages continue to lag behind men's by 23% - and much more for women of color - is just one factor to consider when quantifying women's second class status in the workplace. More than half of all women work in the retail, clerical and service sectors, where they are much less likely to be provided with health care, pensions or paid leave benefits. That means most women's expenses are higher than men's, and their income insecurity and disadvantage extends past their working life all through their retirement years. Having a modest cushion of paid sick days would provide working women with a few more threads in a very frayed employment security safety net.”

"As many as 100,000 working women in Philadelphia don't have access to a single paid sick day at work, " said Amy Traub, Director of Research at The Drum Major Institute for Public Policy. " Because women are more likely to be caregivers for sick children, they bear a disproportionate burden from the failure to guarantee paid sick leave to all workers. Our research shows that guaranteeing paid sick leave doesn't harm business growth or job growth -- but the lack of paid leave hits women and their families hard."

Caryn Hunt, President of the Philadelphia Chapter of the National Organization for Women, said, “The wage gap between men and women workers has not narrowed in over 15 years, and that includes throughout the economic boom years. That it takes women 3 months into the new year to equal the pay of men the previous year is outrageous, not just for women, but for their families that increasingly rely on that income. It's simply unfair. In Philadelphia, Earned Sick Time helps the city take a step closer to worker equity as it would primarily effect workers in healthcare and the food service industry which are predominantly women. It has the added virtue of protecting the public health by giving workers the choice to stay home when they or a loved one is sick.”

Background:

Having no sick days is a double-whammy when women still receive 20 - 30 cents less for every dollar a man makes. Missing even one day - particularly for working mothers - can undermine a woman's financial stability.

When care giving responsibilities and jobs collide, women often bear the brunt of the problem:

  • Half of all working mothers miss work when their child is sick, compared to 30% of working fathers. Of the mothers that miss work, 50% report losing pay when doing so.
  • Even when women have access to sick days, studies show that mothers are the only demographic group more likely to use sick time to care for someone else than for themselves.  
  • Since women are more likely to bear the burden of care giving AND work in low-wage jobs without sick days, they are also more likely to lose their jobs because of a lack of sick days. This job loss prevents longer job tenure and higher wages, and increases the likelihood of a family growing up in poverty.

Promoting Healthy Families and Workplaces Act (Bill 080474) is a bill that would allow Philadelphia workers the opportunity to earn up to nine days of sick time per year. It was voted out of the Public Health and Human Services Committee on March 1, 2011. The bill could affect up to 200,000 workers in Philadelphia who do not have access to paid sick days.

With over 40 percent of Philadelphians lacking earned sick days, a large portion of the population cannot take the time off work to go see a doctor or obtain medical treatment - regardless of the medical coverage they have.

Employees with earned sick days are more likely to stay home when they are sick, limiting the spread of the illness and protecting co-workers, customers, or anyone else they meet during the workday. During the height of the H1N1 pandemic, people were urged to stay home if they had any signs of the flu, however, those without earned sick days were less likely to stay home because they could not afford to. As a result, nearly 8 million H1N1 cases were traced back to employees going to work while sick.

Thursday, May 6, 2010

Mother of the Decade Award

(crossposted from the PathWays PA Policy Blog)


Thank you to our friends at MomsRising for putting this award together.

Sunday is Mother’s Day, a day when moms deserve an award. Do something special for your mom and all the mothers you know by sending them this great award!

Motherhood is one of the hardest full-time jobs, yet mothers in the US are grossly undervalued. Women make 73 cents to every dollar an equally qualified man makes at the same job. Single mothers make only about 60 cents to a man’s dollar. And, according to Salary.com, working mothers should earn $71,860 above their regular salary for their “mom job functions,” while stay-at-home moms do work that would pay $117,856 in the private sector. (“Mom job functions,” if you’re interested, are a hybrid of laundry machine operator, janitor, van driver, computer operator, housekeeper, day care center teacher, cook, chief executive officer, psychologist, and facilities manager, and are based on the salaries paid by small companies.)

Simply becoming a mother by having a baby is the leading cause of poverty spells in the United States. This is largely because 51 percent of new mothers are working outside the home and do not have any paid leave, meaning new mothers either have to go back to work right after giving birth or lose pay. The United States is one of only four countries that does not offer paid leave to new mothers -- the others are Papua New Guinea, Swaziland, and Lesotho.

So, in honor of all that mothers do, please be sure to thank your mom and any moms you know for simply being a mom. Then call your member of Congress and ask them to support paid family leave and paid sick days so that moms and families can ensure their economic security.

Image courtesy of: http://www.wilpf.org/pv_moms_rising

Tuesday, April 20, 2010

On Equal Pay Day, the Need for Earned Sick Time is Even More Obvious

A new report released today from the Institute for Women’s Policy and Research shows how businesses could save money by implementing a paid sick days.  The report was released on Equal Pay Day, the day when women's earnings finally catch up with men's earnings, as it highlights the need to eliminate workplace discrimination and provide, particularly women, with more support ensuring their and their family’s economic security.

The report focuses on the effect the policy would have in Connecticut, saving businesses nearly $73 million a year, but the benefits for paid sick days could be easily be imagined elsewhere using the information. While employers would spend .19 cents per hour per worker, or $6.87 a week, to provide earned sick time, they would save over $12 a week per worker due to benefits such as decreased turnover and sick employees getting others sick.

For women, the benefit of earned sick time is particularly important as women are still generally the primary caregiver in the home. If a child or an elderly relative is sick, it is likely to be a women who needs to care for that individual. When women are already behind, making only .77 cents for every $1 a man earns, losing that income and potentially their job because they lack earned sick time, can be especially devastating.
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