Originally posted by Awesome Sauce Malone
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My example...
After graduating college, I've only had one period as someone else's employee, and that was right after graduation for a few years. This was a white collar, mostly office job, at a company for which you would certainly recognize their finished work in Wichita and the region. Not a position anyone could get; I felt really lucky to have the opportunity. Anyways, at this prominent Wichita employer the annual time off consisted of two weeks paid vacation (bump to three weeks at the 15 year mark, nothing further), five days sick leave (not PTO, or personal days, strictly you-damn-well-better-be-sick time), and six paid holidays (the only people who get less would be food service and retail workers). The paid vacation and sick leave expired annually, and could not be rolled over. I think this package is pretty close to the norm in the US job market, and it is a long ways from enabling a paid maternity leave IMO. It basically equated to being able to spend the holidays out-of-state with family, plus a couple of 3-4 day weekends here and there. It was literally depressing.
As an aside, I have zero problem with the concept of just getting more time off through unpaid leave, but most employers aren't cool with that idea.
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