Skip to content

Food & Drink

Seattle Companies Are Seeing the Benefit of Primo Parental Leave Policies

Staying home with baby—and getting paid—isn’t an anomaly anymore.

By Sheila Mickool with Megan Lamb January 1, 2018

baby-on-board-780

This article originally appeared in the January 2018 issue of Seattle magazine.

Check out the rest of Seattle’s Best Places to Work from our January issue.

When Chelsea Minkler and her husband, Aaron Acklen, decided to start a family, the Kirkland couple had something many new parents don’t: a guarantee that Minkler, a program officer at the Gates Foundation, would be able to take a year off—at her full pay—to be with their new baby, Nora, who was born in late 2016. “We feel incredibly fortunate,” Minkler says.

The Gates Foundation is especially generous with its family leave benefit, but it’s also part of a trend. More and more employers are stepping up their parental leave and other family-friendly policies, including Bank of America (16 weeks paid time off, adoption reimbursement, back-up child care), Zillow (16 weeks paid maternity leave; eight weeks paid paternity leave), Limeade (15 days paid parental leave, 95 days job-protected maternity leave, 60 days job-protected paternity leave). Recently, the City of Seattle increased its paid parental leave benefits to eight weeks—with an additional four weeks of vacation or sick leave—making it one of the most progressive cities in the country with respect to parental leave. 

Impressively, last year, Washington became one of only five states in the nation to mandate paid time off for the birth of a child. Starting in 2020, new parents are guaranteed 12 weeks of paid leave. While paid leave for childbirth and adoption is standard in most Western countries, it isn’t in the U.S. In fact, the Pew Research Center reports that out of 41 countries studied, including Estonia, Latvia and Mexico, the U.S. is the only country that does not mandate paid leave. A number of countries offer paid leave of more than a year. 

The new Washington law is a “model for the nation and a monumental victory for Washington families, small businesses, and our economy,” wrote Kristin Rowe-Finkbeiner in a blog post on the MomsRising website, for which she is CEO and executive director. The national online organization has more than 40,000 members in Washington state. “The members of MomsRising have fought for more than a decade to advance this policy, which is a powerful blueprint for other states around the country to follow.” It’s a big win for families, achieved by organizations like MomsRising that worked tirelessly for years to get the law passed.

Few employers, however, are matching what the Gates Foundation offers: up to 52 weeks of continuous paid time off during the first year of a child’s birth or adoption (for both moms and dads); 100 percent payment for the cost of health coverage for employees and their dependents; no out-of-pocket costs for the birth of a child. 

At the Gates Foundation, both men and women take full advantage of the parental leave benefit. “As a professional woman, I’m glad to see that there is no gender issue; dads are taking leave, too,” Minkler says. “All employees are encouraged to do so, and it is assumed they will. And while you are out, your career track doesn’t freeze. I was reviewed and promoted while on leave.” 

 

Follow Us

The Corporate Rocket

The Corporate Rocket

Mortenson Market Lead Cori Palmer rose through the ranks at lightning speed

Talk about a rapid rise. In 2009, Cori Palmer was a freshly minted graduate from the University of Puget Sound with a bachelor’s degree in psychology. It didn’t take her long to land a job as a business development associate at Mortenson, a Minneapolis-based construction company with a sizable Seattle presence. Five promotions later, Palmer…

Moxie on Monday: Finding Your Ground in Grief

Moxie on Monday: Finding Your Ground in Grief

How to cope with loss and help others heal

The devastating fires in Los Angeles have left many of us feeling deep, collective grief. Having spent a decade in L.A. before moving to Seattle, I feel the ache of this loss on a visceral level. Entire communities have been reduced to ash, lives forever changed. The scale of devastation feels overwhelming. As an empath…

The Pulse: Shaking Off the Frost

The Pulse: Shaking Off the Frost

Big ideas, jazzy teens, burger farewells, and dancing aluminum

Seattle’s about to get a blast of icy air — and while I love the sharp clarity of a cold morning, it’s easy to romanticize when I’m indoors with a cup of coffee and my coziest socks. What’s your go-to for staying warm? Fleece-lined everything? A massive stack of library books? Let’s ride this cold…

The Pulse: January in Motion

The Pulse: January in Motion

Scholarships, piano recycling, and Seattle’s shifting tech scene

January feels like a recovery month. After December’s frenzy, things have finally settled. The days are lengthening, but just barely. I’m re-reading this book to remind myself how to tackle 4:30 p.m. sunsets without turning into a candle-obsessed recluse — or at least to feel better about if I do. Our new magazine is out!…