August 24, 2020

The New Parenting

This week, we’re going to spotlight one of the hot button issues at the intersection of employment and pandemic: how parents are going to cope in a fall without schools. Since March, when the earliest lockdowns began, we were already concerned with what would happen to parents facing school and childcare facility closures, working from home, not working at all, having to make choices between work and care. And, in our round ups of weekly FFCRA complaints, a clear trend emerged with wrongful terminations often due to parents taking legally allowed leave to provide childcare. With the FFCRA protections scheduled to expire at the end of the year and in-person schooling extremely unlikely for most, parenting and the childcare sector more broadly are at a precarious crossroad.

So, starting with today’s post we are going to shed light on what parents are trying to do to provide some form of structured education to kids who can’t go back to the classroom. The solutions mostly serve to deepen the relief of how class,  race, and geography all continue to be important factors in the limits of parents’ abilities to provide children with a safe place to be while preserving parents’ energy and ability to work and care. They also demonstrate how care work is an infrastructure issue, because without care, parents - but mostly moms- are forced out of the workplace.

Over the course of the week we will look at the idea of pods, the costs of personalized teaching, what parents of children with special needs are doing, and how school districts are responding to the demand from parents to access teachers and educational resources for kids who have nowhere else to go.

Paid Family Leave in the Balance

October 28, 2021
Paid Family Leave
Conservative Democratic Senators continue to whittle away the President’s signature social spending plan, and paid family leave is heading for the chopping block, an incredible blow to families already struggling during the coronavirus pandemic.

Female Physicians Experience High Infertility Rates

October 7, 2021
No items found.
The medical profession’s apprenticeship is notoriously grueling. But for women, there has been an additional consequence attributed to the routine: infertility.

Listen: The Fall of Andrew Cuomo

September 20, 2021
No items found.
As an employment law firm, one of our main goals is to champion change for our clients and others who experience sexual harassment in the workplace. The importance of this endeavor reached new heights when it came to light that the former governor of New York, Andrew Cuomo, had been sexually harassing women in his office (and outside) for years. Learn more from Senior Associate Alex Berke on the Delve’s Podcast.

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.