Anonymous wrote:Maybe I’m too menopausal for this BS, but I’d be speaking to HR every day and also make it my boss’s problem - if I’m out sick I can’t work.
You could consult an attorney, not sure where that would go though.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Forgot to add… Your comment of “seems like they want my water to break at work” is a bit dramatic. If you are so concerned, ask for a leave.
Not to mention that most women’s water doesn’t spontaneously break. Oftentimes the doctor does it once the woman is admitted to the hospital when her contractions are frequent enough to warrant hospital admission.
Anonymous wrote:Forgot to add… Your comment of “seems like they want my water to break at work” is a bit dramatic. If you are so concerned, ask for a leave.
Anonymous wrote:Look into the pregnant workers fairness act. It covers exactly this scenario and should be a quick RA approval. I had an employee do this and it was processed the next day (normal RA requests take 2-4 months.)
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Pregnancy isn't a disability.
The conditions you often develop late in pregnancy can be: https://www.pinesfederal.com/blog/2024/june/pregnancy-accommodations-for-federal-employees/
I was put on telework years ago toward the end of my pregnancy due to pre-campsite risk
I see you moving the goal post. OP said nothing about any condition.
Yes she did, she said she had a specific condition and a doctor's note. And it's not like those conditions are rare.
Late pregnancy should be considered a disability even with no conditions. The stress on the body is significant.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Serious question what is the big deal is you go to work.
I used to have car service vouchers in my desk for limo service, we had security who was training, my company was near a hospital.
We had plenty of women over the years go into labor at work. Better than at home by your self or with kids with no one to watch.
Between heart attacks, births, accidents, even a shooting once we do it all time. We had 6,000 staff in building so almost weekly,
Heck I tripped once on curb got a estangled hernia and they got me into hospital asap at lunch time. Had HR coordinate medical benefits, security get me over there. Was not bad at all. Better than if I was home alone.
Years ago at 35 weeks pregnant my doctor determined I was in early labor and recommend reduced actives but not straight up bedrest. We had a major project due when I was going to be about 37 weeks and I asked if I could telework after the 37 week mark. At the time we had intermittent telework but I rarely used it. My project lead (female mother) said no but our manager (male / not a father) said it wasn’t up to her and it made sense. My project lead’s rationale was that first babies are always late, water doesn’t break dramatically like it does in the movies, first deliveries are long, and we might need someone walking paperwork around the building at that point. She said she’d done it twice and it was fine. Her husband worked in our agency and they drove in together. I took the metro and my husband took metro to grad school and hour away. It ended up not being an issue because at 36.5 weeks I worked until 6 pm and early the next morning my water broke dramatically. My daughter was born 4 hours later. My husband left a message on my project lead’s voice mail and I heard later that she started a meeting with “she’s probably having a false alarm and we expect her in later today.” By the time she gave my team that update, I either was pushing or had delivered.
Anonymous wrote:Serious question what is the big deal is you go to work.
I used to have car service vouchers in my desk for limo service, we had security who was training, my company was near a hospital.
We had plenty of women over the years go into labor at work. Better than at home by your self or with kids with no one to watch.
Between heart attacks, births, accidents, even a shooting once we do it all time. We had 6,000 staff in building so almost weekly,
Heck I tripped once on curb got a estangled hernia and they got me into hospital asap at lunch time. Had HR coordinate medical benefits, security get me over there. Was not bad at all. Better than if I was home alone.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Pregnancy isn't a disability.
The conditions you often develop late in pregnancy can be: https://www.pinesfederal.com/blog/2024/june/pregnancy-accommodations-for-federal-employees/
I was put on telework years ago toward the end of my pregnancy due to pre-campsite risk
I see you moving the goal post. OP said nothing about any condition.
Yes she did, she said she had a specific condition and a doctor's note. And it's not like those conditions are rare.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Pregnancy isn't a disability.
The conditions you often develop late in pregnancy can be: https://www.pinesfederal.com/blog/2024/june/pregnancy-accommodations-for-federal-employees/
I was put on telework years ago toward the end of my pregnancy due to pre-campsite risk
I see you moving the goal post. OP said nothing about any condition.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Pregnancy isn't a disability.
The conditions you often develop late in pregnancy can be: https://www.pinesfederal.com/blog/2024/june/pregnancy-accommodations-for-federal-employees/
I was put on telework years ago toward the end of my pregnancy due to pre-campsite risk
I see you moving the goal post. OP said nothing about any condition.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Pregnancy isn't a disability.
The conditions you often develop late in pregnancy can be: https://www.pinesfederal.com/blog/2024/june/pregnancy-accommodations-for-federal-employees/
I was put on telework years ago toward the end of my pregnancy due to pre-campsite risk
Anonymous wrote:Astonishing some of the cruel and indifferent comments on this thread about pregnancy and telework in general. Americans are a cruel and unhappy lot.