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.

Disability Discrimination Is Hurting the Medical Profession

July 26, 2021
Disability Discrimination
A new investigation on the Huffington Post has spotlighted a troubling trend in medicine. Many doctors with disabilities experience persistent discrimination at the hands of other physicians and medical professionals. In a profession that regularly requires workers, especially early career workers, to put in grueling shifts of 80+ hours a week, doctors with disabilities are perceived as unable to live up to the grind.

Highlights on New York State’s Legalization of Recreational Marijuana

July 19, 2021
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Now that New York State has legalized the recreational use of marijuana, there are some changes to the law as it relates to employment, for example, prohibiting discrimination on the basis of legal marijuana use outside of the workplace.

Female Doctors Being Penalized for Wearing Hoop Earrings 

July 13, 2021
Race Discrimination
Gender Discrimination
According to a recent story on The Lily, women in medicine, particularly Latinx and Black women, are being unfairly judged as unprofessional because of their choice to wear hoop earrings during work or school hours.

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