The U.S. is unique among industrialized democracies in the way it treats working women. Unlike other industrialized nations, the United States fails to guarantee paid leave via a permanent or universal federal law. Our current system resembles a patchwork of policies developed by employers and state and local governments, or negotiated as a part of labor contracts.
In addition, COVID-19 continues to impact women in the workforce. Last month brought a breathtaking headline: women accounted for 100% of the jobs lost in December. At first glance, this appears to present a stunning collapse in women’s employment from the previous year — the December 2019 Bureau of Labor Statistics job report showed that women held more jobs than men by a slim margin. Although the COVID-19 pandemic has affected millions of Americans’ livelihoods, working women are disproportionately affected.
It doesn’t have to be this way.
Feb. 5 marks the 28th anniversary of the Family Medical and Leave Act (FMLA), our nation’s unpaid leave law. If the COVID-19 crisis has taught us anything it is the inadequacy of FMLA, which has left most Americans, and many Montanans, behind, forcing them to choose between their family and their job.