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  • Lactivism and Rosa Parks: Um, What Are We Fighting For?

    nursin'Breastfeeding rights have been the big stink on the Derby lately. We had Chag's post on the mom kicked out of Applebee's, and then this post written by some freak yesterday about the mom who wants additional break time during medical exams to pump. And don't ever let us forget the controversy that was Rachel's take on formula give-aways. There's obviously some mixed feelings here, and some back-and-forth. I know I'm all over the map, and here's why.

    First of all, like Chag, I had a problem with Applebee's evictee Brooke Ryan saying being asked to cover up with a blanket was "like telling Rosa Parks...


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  • Parents of Kids With Special Needs Discriminated Against at Work

    wheelchairMost parents I know who have kids with special needs (defined as having behavioral or physical issues) don't think too much about their plight, or about it being much different from the plight of any other parent. Therapy? Okay. Medical appointments? Got it. A hospital stay because of open-heart surgery? You just do what you have to do, that's all. Sure, you might wish an easier life for your child, but there's not a lot of "poor me" going on, at least not in my experience.

    But what if the very fact that you have a child with special needs adversely affects your ability to get or keep a job? Which clearly impacts your family's financial bottom line? And that's what's going on for many parents in this very position. So not only do you likely have increased medical/ therapeutical expenses, but you're also penalized financially in the workplace. "Behavioral, developmental and medical problems make it difficult to find child care, and fitting medical appointments and therapy schedules around work requires flexible hours and understanding employers." And often, employers are unwilling or unable to be flexible enough, which means that parents have to cut working hours to attend to their children. More than 5% of Maine parents in an upcoming study said they'd actually been fired over their situation involving their child.

    We're all aware of discrimination toward pregnant women in the workplace, but this? Clearly, parents of all kinds need better support. And with one in ten Maine children reported as having a diagnosed disability or chronic health condition (up 30% from 1992 to 2005), I'm guessing that the numbers are similar in other areas. Which translates into a lot of parents impacted by the lack of support for them and their children, and a lot of families impacted adversely as a result.

    What about you? Any horror stories to share? 

     



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