March 26th, 2010 | by Leanne
Great news. The White House will be hosting a forum on workplace flexibility on March 31. This is great…right?
You see the problem is that the focus will be on how workplace flexibility can help families manage their work/life better. Those with school age children, those with ailing parents. And I agree, workplace flexibility is great for those populations. But it’s also great for so many others. People who want to pursue their passions. Those who want to work, just not 50+ hours a week. Those who are nearing retirement age and still want to keep working just not at the same pace. Those who do not define themselves by their work/careers but strive to be whole people living fulfilled lives.
And I get it. Especially after the week I’ve had. After traveling for a week I came home with a cold only to be totally trumped by my daughter who contracted pneumonia. It’s been a bit of a lost week of productivity for me. So I get the pressures on family and work. But I also felt those in my 20′s as I was pursuing my graduate degree (no children at the time). And I felt them as I wanted to take time off to travel with my husband (no children at the time). And I feel them for my mom who would like to work, but splitting her time between home in the Northeast and the lovely sunshine of Florida makes that pretty difficult.
So please let’s not do what so many other countries have. Discriminate against those without children and ailing parents. I would hate to see legislation that gives parents of young children the “right” to ask for more flexibility at work. Everyone should be able to ask, present a business case, and at least be heard. It should not matter whether you are a parent or not.
If we make more flexibility at work only about families it will be doomed to fail. So here’s hoping next week there is great discussion on the issue. And that the discussion includes many voices, not just those with children.
2 Comments
As someone without children, I agree! Although, at this point, I will take ANY talk of work flexibility at the national level and keeping it in the media. The AU provision makes me think about how many people would be excluded beyond those who choose not to have children. What about couples who cannot have children? And what about all of those every Tuesday and Thursday 4:30 pm jr high basketball games? Just because a child is over the age of 5 doesn’t mean a parent’s responsibility no longer requires flexibility.
[...] This post was mentioned on Twitter by DrDavidBallard, Leanne Chase, Healthy Workplace , Grace White, Erika and others. Erika said: As someone w/out kids – agree! RT @leanneclc @careerlifecnxn Workplace flexibility isn’t just about families! http://ow.ly/1rm24 #worklife [...]