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The Future of Paid Family Leave in Massachusetts Conference Summary
The passage of a paid
family leave policy
for workers - stalled
by the economic recession
and the events of September
11 - is still possible
in the next legislative
session
but will require a process
of consensus-building
as complicated as the
Education Reform
Act
of 1993.
That was the outcome of a major conference
- "The Future of Paid Family Leave
in Massachusetts: Private Responsibility
or Public Good?" - sponsored in April
by the Rappaport Institute for Greater
Boston at Harvard University's John F.
Kennedy School of Government and the Center
for Women and Enterprise (CWE). The April
24, 2002, conference was held at The Boston
Foundation.
Many of the 100-plus conferees called
for continued work on the issue before
the November elections. The Boston Foundation
volunteered to host gatherings of a working
group of all stakeholders to develop greater
consensus on the issue. Other organizations
- from CWE to MIT's Workplace Center -
agreed to participate in the process.
Stakeholders agreed that the costs of
paid leave should be shared among families,
employers, and the state, as no one sector
is capable of bearing the full cost.
At the conference, the Rappaport Institute
and CWE released a Working Paper - "Home
and Away: The Politics and Policy of
Family Leave in Massachusetts," by
Charles H. Yelen - that provides an overview
of the recent issues and legislative
alternatives for paid family leave in
Massachusetts. The positions of gubernatorial
candidates on the issue were distributed
to participants in a handout.
At the center of the conference discussion
were Massachusetts House Speaker Thomas
N. Finneran, known as the leading "hawk" on
state fiscal matters, and Ann Crittenden,
award-winning author of The Price of
Motherhood: Why the Most Important Job
in the World Is Still the Least Valued.
A panel discussion moderated by Margie
Reedy, anchor at New England Cable News,
followed the addresses.
Virtually all of the conference attendees
- from all points along the ideological
spectrum - agreed on the goal of providing
workers with more opportunities to take
time off for the birth or adoption of
a child, to care for elderly parents,
or
to tend to sick family members. The questions
concerned when, how, and how much.
Crittenden argued that Massachusetts -
and the rest of the U.S. - has failed
families by forcing them to choose between
necessary income and the time they need
to care for their children, elders, and
other family members with medical emergencies.
By not offering paid benefits, Crittenden
argued, American policy undermines the
stability and health of both families
and businesses. The lack of paid benefits
also subtly undermines efforts to get
young people to form stable families
and exacerbates poverty and dysfunctional
welfare systems.
"Right now we are throwing the baby out
with the bath water," Crittenden said. "No
country talks about family values more
than America, and no country does less."
Crittenden emphasized that the United
States is one of only five countries in
the
world without paid family leave. She
asserted that family leave policies in
countries comparable to the United States
such as Sweden (where paid leave is available
to new mothers for one year and to new
fathers for one month) and Canada (where
mothers are eligible for 15 weeks of
paid leave and either parent may take
an additional 35 weeks of leave up to
a maximum of $413 per week) contributed
to higher productivity, greater participation
and stability in the workforce, and stronger
morale.
Finneran agreed that family leave is an
important issue that should be addressed
by the state, but countered that a mandatory
and comprehensive paid family leave policy
could create a financial burden that
would threaten the state's fiscal strength
and drive businesses out of the Commonwealth
into neighboring states with lower tax
and regulatory burdens. He argued that
the ideal must be balanced with the real,
and that overly ambitious state social
policies in the late 1980s were responsible
for the loss of 400,000 jobs.
In a lively question-and-answer session
after the keynote addresses, a variety
of different points were raised.
The day-care tradeoff: Marta Rosa of the
Child Care Resource Center argued that
paid family leave could reduce the burden
on the overburdened day care system.
Rosa noted both the high costs of infant
care ($10,000 to 12,000 per year) and
the long waiting lists for state-subsidized
slots (17,000 for children younger than
school age).
Finneran and Crittenden agreed that the
state and families would save money by
providing family leave opportunities
rather than more slots in overburdened
day care programs for very young children.
They both agreed the care at home was
preferable since infants benefit from
breast-feeding and the opportunity to
bond with their parents in their first
weeks of life.
A call for incrementalism: Finneran and
business advocates said that family leave
policy should be developed incrementally
and through incentives rather than mandates
to avoid unexpected costs and other adverse
consequences.
Representative Marie St. Fleur of Dorchester
also counseled caution. Recalling her
experience as a prosecutor, when she
pursued small companies delinquent on
their unemployment insurance payments,
she argued against using unemployment
funds to cover family leave costs. She
also advised against mandatory programs
that imposed unfair costs on small business.
A call for a comprehensive approach: Crittenden
and others countered that only a universal
policy would avoid the distortions and
inequities of piecemeal private action
on the issue. Jennifer Lane, owner of
an accounting business that assists other
small businesses in complying with regulations,
observed that small businesses are unlikely
to offer paid leave unless it is mandatory.
In almost all cases, she said, businesses
do only what is required and slight long-term
benefits of a program when confronted
with short-term costs.
Kathy Walsh, owner of a small firm in
Wellesley, suggested that she would rather
be faced
with costs for paid family leave than
see her daughter and grandchildren continue
to struggle with these issues that she
herself confronted as a young woman.
Costs in dispute
Both keynote speakers and panelists sparred
over the costs of implementing a paid family
leave policy in Massachusetts.
Estimates for different policy options
range from $10 million in the first year
for Finneran's tax credit proposal to
$300 million per year for a mandatory
employer-paid proposal set forth by Representative
Patricia Jehlen and Senator Susan Fargo.
Jim Klocke of the Greater Boston Chamber
of Commerce estimated that costs could
run as high as $1 billion, although some
panelists thought this estimate was inflated
by a high assumed "take-up" rate.
At a later panel discussion of experts,
Randy Albelda, an economist at the University
of Massachusetts at Boston, said a paid
leave policy would represent a "shifting
and smoothing of costs" rather than
an increase of costs. The cost of paid
family leave programs, she said, would
be no greater than the current cost of
lost wages, lost pension, and out-of-pocket
health care costs of those who leave
the workforce on unpaid leaves, the unemployment
costs borne by the government, and the
cost of lower productivity and morale
faced by employers. "We'll all pay" for
paid family leave, Albelda said, "but
we'll all benefit."
The costs of implementing a paid family
leave policy, Crittenden argues, are
far lower than the cost of not doing
so. In the absence of paid family leave,
government expenditures on child care
subsidies and welfare payments rise.
Studies show poorer health and decreased
success in school among low-income families
that cannot afford time off to tend to
family needs. Calling paid family leave
a critical investment in America's greatest
source of wealth - its human capital
- Crittenden challenged policy-makers
and citizens to push for paid family
leave.
Finneran said many employers have already
made a business decision to offer paid
family leave without the "lash of
government" mandating this policy.
At the same time, Finneran said he recognized
that leaving the issue of paid leave
to the discretion of the private sector
alone will not lead to rapid changes.
He called for passage of a tax credit
that would compensate employers for part
of the cost of financing family leave
to quicken the pace of change.
Under the Finneran plan, employers with
250 or fewer employees - a group that
encompasses 90 percent of Massachusetts
employers and 50 percent of workers -
would be eligible for a 20-percent tax
credit to offset costs. Employees would
bear 20 percent of the cost of family
leave policies through decreased wages,
while the employer would pay the remaining
60 percent.
Finneran said his plan gives appropriate
weight and recognition to both smaller
employers, who cannot afford to pay the
full cost of paid family leave, and larger
employers, such as Raytheon and Gillette,
which can.
Jim Klocke of the Greater Boston Chamber
of Commerce echoed Finneran, saying that
the business community embraces the concept
of paid family leave but needs to insure
that the policy would not create an uncompetitive
tax burden or mandates on business.
Advocates from all sides agreed that families,
businesses, and the state should share
costs of a program and that no party should
bear the entire cost.
Focus on mothers … or family?
As the conference progressed, panelists
and others remarked on the "gendered" nature
of the discussion. While paid leave should
affect both sexes and people throughout
the life cycle, the issue was often referred
to as a concern for mothers. The tendency
to consider family leave a "mother's
issue" has contradictory effects on
the debate.
On the one hand, limited participation
in leave programs would limit the overall
costs. The large gap in cost estimates
was due to different estimates of the "take-up" rates.
Some panelists suggested that the take-up
rate would remain low, while others said
it would grow over time, as families
understood their right to take advantage
of a new entitlement program. The higher
the take-up rate, the higher the costs
of the policy.
On the other hand, restricted participation
limits the potential coalition for family
leave. By restricting the debate about
family leave policy to challenges surrounding
childbirth, the coalition cuts itself
off from many potential allies.
Ann Bookman, the executive director of
the MIT Workplace Center and a former
Labor Department official in the Clinton
Administration, noted that advocates
need to educate Americans about the price
children pay for America's lack of attention
to family leave. With more awareness
of the importance of paid family leave,
the general public would be much more
likely to support these policies in the
voting booth and at tax time. The take-up
rate of any paid family leave policy
and the cost of such a policy would also
rise if families, both men and women,
were aware of the importance of leave
to their children, but it would be more
politically supportable.
Cindy Rizzo, a program manager for the
Boston Foundation, noted that family
leave policy should not forget the wide
range of emergencies and everyday needs
that require family members to take time
off from work. All panelists agreed that
the state should provide at least some
financial assistance for missed work
due to the need to care for elderly parents,
children with serious medical problems,
and spouses and other family members
with medical needs.
Toward a new paradigm of public and private
Ultimately, a new family leave policy
could change the way Americans understand
social policy - creating the opportunity
for a more efficient as well as inclusive
policy.
In introductory remarks, Charles Euchner,
executive director of the Rappaport Institute,
argued that the family leave debate could
lead to a more sophisticated understanding
of the appropriate roles for the public
and private sectors in American life.
Under the classic understanding of the
public-private distinction, articulated
by theorists from John Stuart Mill to
Hannah Arendt, the public and private
realms are considered fundamentally separate
and distinct. Although the public realm
plays important role in setting the ground
rules for society, under the classic
understanding, it should be restricted
from interfering in the everyday activities
of families and firms.
But the debate about family leave underscores
the need for private entities to have
the support they need to fulfill their
distinct roles. "Both families and
firms can make the strongest contribution
to the larger community," Euchner
said, "if they themselves have the
support they need to do what they do
best." A strong family leave policy
- if designed well - could actually reduce
the overall role of government in fundamentally
private activities.
"Sometimes the best way for government to
allow private entities to be free to do
their own thing is to provide a basic support
structure," Euchner said. "We
need to explore whether a paid leave policy
should be part of that support structure."
Andrea Silbert, the founder and chief
executive officer of the Center for Women
and Enterprise,
spoke from two perspectives - as a mother
and as the head of a nonprofit corporation.
"I understand that businesses need to keep
their operations lean and efficient to
survive," she said. "I also understand
that they need help to provide the support
that their employees need to make the best
contributions they can to the enterprise.
When you think about family leave, it's
really a win-win proposition. It's a way
of caring for our families at the same
time we strengthen our private and nonprofit
businesses."
Silbert underscored the need for a partnership
to realize the goals of the family leave
movement. "The Speaker and the Chamber
of Commerce are right that business should
not have to bear the brunt of this. They're
right to be concerned about the long-term
impact on our competitiveness as a state," she
said. "Clearly, we need to find
a way to create a policy that answers
this basic need without breaking anyone's
bank."
Calls for action
At several points in the conference, participants
noted that with more participation of women
in the political process, both as active
citizens and as elected officials, the
heavy "double burden" of caregiving
and wage earning that currently falls on
many women is more likely to be at least
partially redistributed-to men, to the
state, and to the rest of society. Calling
mothers "the sleeping political giant
of this country," Crittenden urged
mothers and other concerned citizens to
press for paid family leave. Women legislators
urged women to run for political office.
Bookman called for the creation of a statewide
work-family council - with representation
from all stakeholders from business to
labor to women's groups - to push the debate
over paid family leave.
Silbert closed the conference by noting
the agreement that paid family leave
is still just as important to Massachusetts
as it was the day before September 11,
despite the current economic downturn. "Family
friendly can be business friendly," she
said.
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