Zuckerberg To Take 2 Months Paternity Leave To Give His Kid a Better Outcome (techcrunch.com)
theodp writes: TechCrunch reports that Facebook CEO Mark Zuckerberg will take two months off from Facebook for paternity leave. Why? "Studies show that when working parents take time to be with their newborns, outcomes are better for the children and families," Zuckerberg explained in a FB post on Friday. "At Facebook we offer our U.S. employees up to 4 months of paid maternity or paternity leave which they can take throughout the year." No word on why the child will only get 50% of that time — maybe that's what the gains chart suggested as a good tradeoff — or if expectant parents who apply to send their children to Zuckerberg's new Primary School, which aims to "help children from underserved communities reach their full potential," will be expected to make a similar commitment.
In related research, children born to billionaire parents are statistically likely to experience better outcomes than those below the poverty line.
Happiness in intelligent people is the rarest thing I know.
Ernest Hemingway
Good on him indeed, this means several things:
He's a big-shot CEO who can delegate. Great
This sort of things is not reserved for women. Fathers should take time off too. Great
The workplace is not the be-all and end-all of all things. Kids are important too, they are our future. Great
Wait, what? I clicked on this in my Twitter feed without looking, thinking it was going to be the Onion.
I took out 19 months with our firstborn - from when he was 4 months old.
Of course, I'm Swedish. Anyone who would only take two months would be seen as quite uninterested in their children.
(In Sweden you get 480 days per child, to be divided as you see fit between mother and father. 120 of those days are however locked, divided up as 60 each, to each parent. You get 80% of your salary during parental leave, capped to a maximum which is far far below what anyone in "IT" makes)
it's in my head
If they can afford it, yes. How many can these days?
I got my ass handed to me for missing half a day for the unanticipated and rather sudden onset labor of my firstborn, so.... certainly not all of us.
GP may be from a nation with scandinavian-like healthcare.
Happiness in intelligent people is the rarest thing I know.
Ernest Hemingway
Except that in every other developed country in the world, this is considered a basic human right that *every* company, small and large, can somehow afford to "hand out".
Zuckerberg is hardly what I'd consider a positive role model, unless you feel screwing over millions of people by selling their personal information to the highest bidder while simultaneously looking down on them all as plebs is a virtue.
BeauHD. Worst editor since kdawson.
Why is this news? Don't most parents take (m|p)aternity leave when they have newborns?
I guess this is why this really is news that matters. Because paternity leave is a very rare thing in the US. You may live in Europe where this being news sounds like nonsense, which more Americans need to realize. Less than 15% of US employers offer paternity leave, and that is almost entirely exclusive to white collar professions. Paternity leave tends to be about two weeks here, as opposed to months in more progressive European countries.
-- All that is necessary for the triumph of evil is that good men do nothing. -- Edmund Burke
I took 4 days, cause that's all the vacation time I had and in the US no one is going to pay you
I only got 8. The judge took pity on me.
Confucius say, "Find worm in apple - bad. Find half a worm - worse."
Yes, it is in writing. But can they actually take the time off. A ridiculous number of people can't even take their vacation time because of the fear they will be asked to stop bothering to come into the office.
And they won't say "we're letting you go because you took vacation time", because would be illegal, just something like "we want to move in a different direction, one without you on our team."
Sleep your way to a whiter smile...date a dentist!
Or when you come back to work after an approved vacation your boss approaches you and tells you that a customer complained about you, and that you're fired. Even though in the industry I work in, customer complaints, while taken seriously, are a frequent event. Everyone complains about something, and to get fired for it is rare, and in some shops, illegal under contract.