The sperm donors are usually more flexible. They don't have a kid hanging on to a teat.Where do the dad's fit?
The sperm donors are usually more flexible. They don't have a kid hanging on to a teat.Where do the dad's fit?
It took 14 years to shake my kid off. She was stuck to me like glue.The sperm donors are usually more flexible. They don't have a kid hanging on to a teat.
The Human Right's groups in Canada are idiots
Nothing in the article says she was asking to be given precedent over a single person. Just that she was asking for an accommodation for herself. If that's not possible because of other employees' schedules, that's not possible, then they'd have a valid argument not to. But the article makes it sound like they did not accommodate her simply because they were able to refuse.
You are correct, my mistake on the numbers.It was 3 10's and a 4, but a moot point if the full time cut off is 32 in Toronto and not 36.
You are correct, my mistake on the numbers.
Doesn't change the fact that she was unwilling to seek out and pay or childcare for that 4 hour shift like every other person does. I think they bent over backwards for her by allowing her to not work rotational shifts like all the other agents at the airport do and I'm sure you will find some with children. What this ruling does is open the door for all the other employees with kids to now dictate when they will work. This will turn into a nightmare for any employer who runs shifts and I can see them not hiring women with children or young women who might be having children in the future. She has not done any good for those women out there because it will become a consideration for employers when hiring.
Perhaps according to the union agreement the shift she was demanding required paying some overtime.
I would certainly imagine it did which is another consideration. Why should we, the taxpayers, foot the bill for her extra pay (being a federal govt employee I am sure it isn't cheap) because she chose to have a kid.
Just another example of unequal rights for women. Equal means equal, not equal but with a few extra rights thrown in because of your gender. That makes me feel discriminated against because I am a man. So in my mind you need to make a choice, you either want equal rights or different rights and if you choose different then we can go back to barefoot & in the kitchen and you can forget about voting. ;-)It's a biological drive that has the capacity to kill a woman if unmet. It can tear apart marriages, families, and the individual. While I've made the rational choice to cap my family due to health concerns (I was going blind from my pregnancies due to pseudotumor), I would have taken the health risk to have my first two. I had no choice. It was my driving factor from the time I was 10 years old on.
So can you dismiss it and say 'your choice, I'm not going to try to accommodate you?'
That is the opinion of the author. I think she made a request and was offered a compromise, which she initially accepted (meaning she managed childcare at first). She decided that the employer should be at her beck & call and give her whatever she wants and went to the idiots at human rights even though she had accepted their original offer. Realistically they could have said no, the job you signed up for requires rotational shift work and if that doesn't work for you then look elsewhere.The close of this article states that her request was reasonable. Turning it down simply because policy said you could is flawed.
Just another example of unequal rights for women. Equal means equal, not equal but with a few extra rights thrown in because of your gender. That makes me feel discriminated against because I am a man. So in my mind you need to make a choice, you either want equal rights or different rights and if you choose different then we can go back to barefoot & in the kitchen and you can forget about voting. ;-) .
Because 99.995% of the time it will be applied to women.why are you applying it just to women?
That is because I live in the real world, not the little fairy-tale dream world of the HRC.It seems to me that lies with you not with the HRC.
Because 99.995% of the time it will be applied to women.
That is because I live in the real world, not the little fairy-tale dream world of the HRC.
Whether it is a woman or a man matters not. The point is whomever signed up and agreed to do a job under certain conditions and with certain requirements. Now that person cannot or will not live up to the requirements they committed to for whatever reason and instead of finding alternate employment they want the employer to change those conditions and requirements of the job. That is not fair to the employer or the other staff who live up to their responsibilities surrounding employment.
She tried extremely hard to find a babysitter, but have you ever wondered why they call it daycare? She could not find a place open during evenings when many shifts would take place.
They were not required to make accommodations, but they were required to not use her family status as the reason for not making accommodations, apparently this distinction is too subtle for many people here. Once you have a policy of making accommodations you cannot say it is ok for one thing but not ok for prohibited grounds of discrimination.
She didn't refuse to do her job, or change the conditions. The conditions there always were that shifts were negotiated, that's why there were policies on the books regarding said practice. The only difference she has made, is that childcare concerns can no longer be brushed off. That still doesn't mean that they HAVE to accommodate if they can't, it only means that they can't be dismissive of it.