September 11, 2020
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Employees Push Back at Tech Companies for Giving Parents too Much

It might seem like vanilla stuff for some of the world’s almost capitalized companies in the world to provide extra support to employees during a global pandemic, but not so at companies like Facebook and Twitter, where a rift has formed between parents, non-parents and employers over the companies’ policy responses to daycare and school closures, according to an article in the New York Times, which was published over the weekend.

At issue is a group of policies instituted at several major tech firms meant to address the drastic and unprecedented predicament everyone faced, including policies that took into account that parents who worked full-time, could only do so because things like company-provided or private daycare or schools were open. Unsurprisingly, when they shuttered, companies had to scramble to assist parents with this increased burden. Among the instances of this were a Facebook policy that provided 10 weeks of paid time off for employees who had children affected by school or daycare closures and 6 weeks of paid time off for parent workers at Salesforce.

However, many childless workers have voiced their concerns that parents are getting preferential treatment and that they are having to pick up the slack without being recognized for it. According to the article, there have been angry exchanges over internal message boards at Facebook and Twitter and calls for Facebook COO Sheryl Sandberg to address these concerns. 

Like many problems that seem to come out of nowhere as a result of the  pandemic are actually the eruptions of deeply simmering resentments about additional benefits conferred to parents.  Regardless, the pandemic has thrown these issues into starker relief and it makes for a fascinating read, considering we have spent months like a broken record reminding people that with childcare decimated the biggest losers in this will be parents, especially mothers, who have to pick up significantly more of the slack and ultimately sacrifice their careers for childcare.

Laurie Berke-Weiss Quoted in NY Law Journal Article about Investigation into Sexual Harassment Claims Against Governor Cuomo

March 3, 2021
Sexual Harassment
As New Yorkers follow the sexual harassment allegations against Governor Cuomo with interest, the New York Law Journal explores “What’s Next for the Investigation Into Sexual Harassment Claims Against Cuomo.”

Profile of Silvia Federici Highlights What She’s Been Saying for Decades, Capitalism Exploits Women. The Pandemic Just Made it Impossible to Ignore.

March 2, 2021
Gender Discrimination
As the pandemic has thrown millions into unemployment, has affected women disproportionately, and laid bare just how much working people rely on myriad forms domestic care, others are, as this wide-ranging profile in the New York Times magazine suggests, rediscovering the socialist feminism of Federici and her contemporaries, such as Selma James, Angela Davis, and the Combahee River Collective.

Fed Chair Makes a Case for Affordable Childcare

February 25, 2021
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In a two-day testimony before the House Financial Services Committee, Fed Chair Jerome Powell let it be known that improved federal child care programs would have a positive impact on women remaining in the workforce.

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