Posted by: Lauren Young on May 07
How important is work-life balance to the First Lady?
Very important.
Here are Michelle Obama’s edited remarks from the Corporate Voices for Working Families event today in Washington. I’m including most of her talk here because she touches on so many burning issues: childcare, balance, sick leave, paid maternity and adoption leave as well as flexible work schedules.
All I can say is, “Amen, sister.”
Says Obama: “I personally…know the challenges of leading a busy life at work and at home, trying to do a good job at both — and always feeling like you’re not quite living up to either — and trying not to pit one against the other, really trying to balance it so that — if people here are like me — I call myself a 120-percenter. If I’m not doing any job at 120 percent, I think I’m failing. So if you’re trying to do that at home and at work, you find it very difficult and stressful and frustrating.
“And even though my current life, trust me, is very different than it was and for most people — and I do know that; I know that right now I am living, as challenging as it may seem, in a very blessed situation, because I have what most families don’t have, is tons of support all around, not just my mother but staff and administration. I have a Chief of Staff and a personal assistant, and everyone needs that; that’s what we need. Everyone should have a Chief of Staff and a set of personal assistants.
“But one thing I know from meeting women and men across the country is that the work-life challenges that I’ve faced aren’t different from the challenges facing other families and undoubtedly many of you.
“Things are very different for working families than when many of us were growing up. I talked about this a lot on the campaign trail. When I look back on my childhood and the life that my parents provided, working-class folks with not a lot of money, my father was a blue-collar city worker who worked a shift job. But because he earned enough as a shift worker without a college degree, he could still support a family of four on that salary. And because he could, with that salary, support us — we rented a home, we didn’t live lavishly — my mother was able to stay at home. She could afford to make the choice not to go to work while we were growing up. That was how families balanced back then.
“But things are very different today. One income really doesn’t always cut it anymore. And that’s in my lifetime. In most families, both parents have to work, and even if people want to make the choice to stay home. And again, there is no subjective analysis or — of what is better. But people can’t make the choice. It’s even harder for single parents, and there are millions of them all across this country who are trying to build a life for themselves and their children, and they find in an economy that’s tough that they’re not just holding down one but they need a couple of jobs just to make ends meet.
“Twenty-two million working women don’t have a single paid sick day. That means they lose money any time they have to stay home to take care of their kids. You know, imagine making that choice. And we do it all the time. And even when I had sick leave, I found myself, you know, hoping that the kids would stay well, just I couldn’t afford to take the day off because there was a meeting, or something was going on. So your whole life is just contingent upon everything working perfectly. So imagine families who don’t have any sick time. So if somebody gets sick, they have to take time off, and they lose the money that they can’t afford.”
Obama goes on to say that she wants to know how companies are making it work, "because that's how we're going to figure this out, looking at the best practices and figuring out how we can replicate that -- employers here learn how to implement programs that are beneficial to the bottom line," she says.
Finally, as a manager, Obama says that when you provide programs that enable employees to remain productive in their work, which everybody wants to do, they have to feel like their home life is stable and manageable.
"So I found that as I've managed staff, the more flexibility and opportunities that I gave them to be good parents, the more commitment that they made to working with me, the less likely they were to leave because they wouldn't find the same sort of situation somewhere else," Obama says.
"So this isn't just about family balance. This is about making work places stronger and more effective, and keeping and attracting the most qualified people. This research is critical to empowering employers and is politically -- particularly important during our current economic climate.
"We need to discuss flexible work hours that give employees greater ability to attend to important family responsibilities like child pick-up, something as simple as that; doctors appointments for those not just with kids, but for people with elderly parents. We're finding more and more that families are in that crunch, as well.
"We need to discuss paid leave for birth or adoption of a child and when there's a serious illness that arises.
"We need to discuss quality on-site child care, something that keeps many of us up at night as families; you're just wondering where are we going to put our children where we feel like that they're being safe -- that they're safe and being loved. That will relieve many of the stresses that parents feel on the job throughout the day.
"These types of policies can be the key to whether a family remains economically viable or slips into financial uncertainty.
"I expect this day to be the first of what will be for me many conversations that I'll get a chance to participate in. We need to find ways to encourage other employers to follow your lead and adopt work-life policies that afford employees flexibility and much-needed support. We want to work together to make clear that, again, investing in these types of policies pays off for employers as well as the employees."
What do you think of the First Lady's remarks? What issue here matters most to you and why?
Personally I've never understood why your average American considers things like maternity leave, sick days, universal health care (not the same as socialized medicine), decent vactation time etc to be well, un-American. Canada and Europe manage to varying degrees provide all of the above while at the same time maintaining world class economies.
What matters to me most and why?
1. Sick leave - I can't imagine having to choose whether to care for a sick kid or get paid. I've struggled w/I've got an important meeting is he really that sick question - but really - that's not a big choice b/c I'm going to get paid and I'm not going to lose my job if I don't go to work (I've also relaxed a lot about missing work since I had my first...) and what if you have a child w/health issues???
2. Affordable on-site child care. Again - another luxury I've had - I pay for it - I don't know if it's affordable - it doesn't seem affordable and I'm mid-level - what about the secretaries???? but having my children in day care in my building is wonderful - I will miss it next year when the last one goes to school.
In this blog, BusinessWeek’s Lauren Young, Cathy Arnst, Diane Brady, Karyn McCormack, Anne Newman, Mauro Vaisman, Lourdes L. Valeriano, and Joy Katz, Mark Hyman, along with freelance writer Savita Iyer-Ahrestani, lead a broad discussion of the issues and day-to-day concerns of working parents, offering up interviews with work/life experts, examinations of relevant research, and their personal accounts of bouncing between separate, sometimes conflicting worlds.