September 27, 2017

Assembly member Aravella Simotas Hosts Pregnancy Project

Reprinted from the Times Ledger

Simotas hosts Paid Family Leave event for pregnant women

By Bill Parry

Dozens of pregnant women and expecting parents gathered at a free seminar in Astoria last week to get comprehensive information on workplace rights guaranteed by New York State’s landmark paid family leave law which goes into effect Jan. 1.

The program, hosted by state Assemblywoman Aravella Simotas (D-Astoria), armed the people who attended with the information they need to exercise their rights to paid family leave and health insurance coverage for prenatal care.

“I am committed to helping pregnant women and new parents navigate laws and understand their rights to protect their jobs and the health of their new babies,” Simotas said. “We need healthy families to be a healthy community.”

Paid Family Leave will provide employees with wage replacement and job protection to help them bond with a child, care for a close relative with a serious health condition, or help relieve family pressures when someone is deployed abroad on active military service. Employees are also entitled to be reinstated to their job when their leave ends, and to the continuation of their health insurance during their leave.

Alex Berke and Rosa Alberti, of the female-owned law firm Berke-Weiss and co-creators of the Pregnancy Project, were the presenters at the seminar, held last Friday at the Variety Boys & Girls Club of Queens. The team provided vital information on how to tell your boss you’re pregnant, how to ask for accommodations at work, how to use benefits under the state’s new Paid Family Leave law, and health insurance issues.

The firm launched the Pregnancy Project as a way to improve the lives of working mothers-to-be and working parents.

“Too many pregnant women do not understand their rights to take leave and use their health insurance,” Berke said. “Our Pregnancy Project seminar helps pregnant women and their families understand their rights and empowers them to have the necessary conversations with their employers and health insurers.”

The city Human Rights Commission’s Queens Community Service Center Director Rasel Rahman explained the protections for families under the NYC Human Rights Law, which makes it illegal to discriminate in the workplace because of a women’s pregnancy, in housing or in any place of public accommodation.

In 2015, the state enacted legislation sponsored by Simotas that made pregnancy a qualifying event for getting health insurance outside the designated enrollment periods. This change to the law now enables women to gain access to prenatal care they might not otherwise have.

Check Out Our Upcoming Classes

Contact Us to Host a Pregnancy Project Presentation

white line

Motivational Speaker Tony Robbins Sued over Covid-related Discrimination

December 29, 2020
No items found.
A new lawsuit, filed by an employee of the motivational speaker Tony Robbins, alleges that Robins’s company, Robbins Research International, along with Robbins and his wife Bonnie, discriminated against the employee who requested reasonable accommodations be met for her recovery from coronavirus.

Doctor’s Video Underscores How Structural Racism Permeates the Medical Profession

December 29, 2020
Race Discrimination
One of the most devastating forms in which structural race discrimination appears is in the worlds of medicine and health care where people of color, especially Black people are provided with inferior forms of care, which are often deadly.

Emergency Paid Leave and Sick Days under Fire in New Stimulus Negotiations

December 21, 2020
Leave
As Congress races to finalize a new round of stimulus for the nation, stricken at the moment with the winter surge that epidemiologists predicted, workers are under threat of losing access to paid emergency leave as well as paid sick days. According to the National Partnership for Women & Families, allowing such provisions to expire would be a grave mistake.

Get In Touch

Knowing where to turn in legal matters can make a big difference. Contact our employment lawyers to determine if we can help you.