andrewducker: (Default)
andrewducker ([personal profile] andrewducker) wrote2008-04-23 05:00 pm

I'm disgusted

If you are a woman, know one, or are related to one then you'll almost certainly be as sickened as I am by this article on discrimination against pregnant mothers.  But not terribly surprised by most of it.  The bit that gets to me is that an advisor to the government is saying it, and nobody is speaking out to contradict him...

[identity profile] rwrylsin.livejournal.com 2008-04-23 10:24 pm (UTC)(link)
One of the things that Sugar is right on is that not being able to ask and discuss at all does sometimes mean that you can decide not to hire.

I don't get this at all. You can ask them if they're ok with long hours, weekend work, travel, where do you see yourself in 5 years time, etc. There are all sorts of reasons why they might not be ok, of which kids are only one. Why pick on mothers?
If they strike you as the sort of person who's only going to realise on the first day of work that it interferes with picking up the kids from school then you've got a much better reason not to hire them than the fact that they're a mother.

Yes it sucks to be the employer when you employee changes their mind or has something unexpected come up, or lies in the interview, but that also happens for many reasons. I've never worked more than 3 years at any job despite having no kids, and I still usually outlast most of my (mostly male) colleagues. Had a contractor once who announced a few weeks in that actually, he'd had a better offer elsewhere, so was burning his bridges and out of here. It's what you have to put up with when hiring humans. Some of them suck. Most of them have a life outside work.
Maybe she'll get pregnant, maybe he'll suddenly decide it's time to achieve his dream of sailing around the world. You try to get their measure in the interview then take your chances.