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WWMMD-TTC with no work policy in place

H and I have been thinking more seriously lately about moving up our TTC timeline a little.  The drive to start a family is starting to "gain" on the drive to travel.  With that said, I've begun thinking about the logistics.

I work at a small nonprofit with only 4 employees.  There is no HR department, and I will not have FMLA protection.  I like my job; it's a great career stepping stone and I want to keep it once I'm a parent.  I'm ok with being a working mom-it's the right choice for me.  All of  my time is grant funded, but historically my organization hasn't had a huge problem finding funding and keeping everyone employeed.  I currently have 20 hours a week funded through 2019, the other 20 through next year, and more opportunities on the horizon.  

Our maternity policy is limited to "leaves of absence for any reason may be granted at the discretion of the board."  I'm not expecting anything paid, but am hopeful my job would be held.  A previous employee was granted leave once just to travel for a month, so I'm hopeful I'd be okay.  Although we don't have formal job reviews, I have good relationships with my supervisor and board of directors and got a merit raise after my first year.  We need me to be employeed to keep our lifestyle, although in a worst case scenario we could get by with me making less, particularly if it decreased our childcare costs.  

Anyway, there is no way for me to find out a more concrete maternity leave policy without alerting my supervisor to our plans.  Would you ask about it if you were me or just hope for the best?

Re: WWMMD-TTC with no work policy in place

  • I would ask your supervisor about the policy.  That way you know how much you need to save if any for when you are on leave.  Honestly you really need 8 weeks off for vaginal delivery and 12 weeks off for c/section.

    Congrats on TTC timeline moving on up :)  DH and I will TTC our #2 towards the very end of this year, Jan 2016 at the latest.  We are waiting until his studio is up and running before we take on another financial project :)  I'm excited and nervous at the same time.  Excited because the baby stage is my absolute favorite! and nervous because my pregnancy with DD was absolutely horrible.
    Baby Birthday Ticker Ticker
  • vlagrl29 said:

    I would ask your supervisor about the policy.  That way you know how much you need to save if any for when you are on leave.  Honestly you really need 8 weeks off for vaginal delivery and 12 weeks off for c/section.


    Congrats on TTC timeline moving on up :)  DH and I will TTC our #2 towards the very end of this year, Jan 2016 at the latest.  We are waiting until his studio is up and running before we take on another financial project :)  I'm excited and nervous at the same time.  Excited because the baby stage is my absolute favorite! and nervous because my pregnancy with DD was absolutely horrible.
    Thanks! We're still a few months off, but are thinking of switching to NTNP once my dive instructor course is done in May, vs. next Dec or Jan.

    I'd love 12 weeks. If it fell during the summer it would be totally doable, but much harder if it fell March-May. We may just avoid those due dates our first year trying, who knows.

    I'm really nervous for being pregnant, too, but pumped to actually have a child.
  • I would ask your supervisor about the policy.  That way you know how much you need to save if any for when you are on leave.  Honestly you really need 8 weeks off for vaginal delivery and 12 weeks off for c/section.

    Congrats on TTC timeline moving on up :)  DH and I will TTC our #2 towards the very end of this year, Jan 2016 at the latest.  We are waiting until his studio is up and running before we take on another financial project :)  I'm excited and nervous at the same time.  Excited because the baby stage is my absolute favorite! and nervous because my pregnancy with DD was absolutely horrible.
    Thanks! We're still a few months off, but are thinking of switching to NTNP once my dive instructor course is done in May, vs. next Dec or Jan. I'd love 12 weeks. If it fell during the summer it would be totally doable, but much harder if it fell March-May. We may just avoid those due dates our first year trying, who knows. I'm really nervous for being pregnant, too, but pumped to actually have a child.
    It only took us 1 month to get pregnant with DD.  I swore it was going to take a year because I was older (29 - i know that's not old) but it didn't.  You just never know until you start trying so keep that in mind.  Who knows how long it will take us next time, I will be 35 next time.  Pregnancy is SO worth it (remind me I said that).  Having DD has brought so much joy in our lives - life just fills so much more full.
    Baby Birthday Ticker Ticker
  • I would ask.

    I am open with our dean of faulty. She is aware that my part time 9-1 schedule is going to be seriously wonky with my school schedule next fall. I am trying to get a 6 hour bio/lab a math course and a two day a week art course out of the way before there is baby around. She is supportive and says we will make it work. No harm in asking. I got exactly what I was hoping for.

    Anniversary
    Love: March 2010   Marriage: July 2013   Debt Free: October 2014   TTC: May 2015
  • I'd try to talk to you supervisor about the policy, and probably make sure you're prepared to take 12 weeks off without pay. I would hope that in such a small work environment they would be fairly open with you, even if the discussion doesn't happen until after you're pregnant. It seems like if they're willing to let someone take a month off for travel an 8-12 week maternity leave wouldn't be unreasonable. 

    I also work in a grant funded position, granted I have a much larger institution behind my position with HR and leave policies in place, but that doesn't help the fact that I am a key person in the grants I work under and being out for several months is going to require that I have someone else trained to do my job. H and I have accelerated our TTC timeline as well, however as open as I am with my boss, I'm not planning to bring it up at work until I'm actually pregnant and past the 8-12 week mark, that would still give us several months to develop a plan to deal with my leave and train a temp if necessary.
    Me: 28 H: 30
    Married 07/14/2012
    TTC #1 January 2015
    BFP! 3/27/15 Baby Girl!! EDD:12/7/2015
  • Gdaisy09 said:

    I'd try to talk to you supervisor about the policy, and probably make sure you're prepared to take 12 weeks off without pay. I would hope that in such a small work environment they would be fairly open with you, even if the discussion doesn't happen until after you're pregnant. It seems like if they're willing to let someone take a month off for travel an 8-12 week maternity leave wouldn't be unreasonable. 


    I also work in a grant funded position, granted I have a much larger institution behind my position with HR and leave policies in place, but that doesn't help the fact that I am a key person in the grants I work under and being out for several months is going to require that I have someone else trained to do my job. H and I have accelerated our TTC timeline as well, however as open as I am with my boss, I'm not planning to bring it up at work until I'm actually pregnant and past the 8-12 week mark, that would still give us several months to develop a plan to deal with my leave and train a temp if necessary.
    Yes, finding coverage is going to suck! My boss will probably cover for me, as it would take longer than 6 weeks to train someone for my job. Our admin assistant my also take over for some duties.

    I'm not too worried about the unpaid leave. We can get by for my leave, but with zero margin to save it wouldn't be sustainable long term. I'm in one of four states that offers a small stipend for maternity, even if you're at a small employer. I could also probably use accrued PTO. What I'd really like to have is a "yes we will hold your job." At the same token, I really don't want to have to talk with my boss about "how it's going" all the time, especially if it doesn't go smoothly, so it's a judgement call.

    Health insurance is through H, very low deductible and OOP max, and we're already on the family plan, so that's not a huge consideration either.
  • If you feel comfortable, I would talk to your supervisor about it.  Each pregnancy is different - same with every delivery.  I've had two c-sections, neither planned.  Medically, recovery is 6 weeks for a vaginal delivery and 8 weeks for a c-section.  Meaning my OB couldn't "medically keep" me off of work any longer than 8 weeks since I had c-sections.  I did qualify for FMLA and took 12 weeks.  I was also lucky and had pretty boring pregnancies.  One lady at work was pulled off of work because of complications 10 weeks prior to having the baby.  She didn't plan for that - no one did.  Her FMLA is used up.  She's now in discussion with her supervisor and HR about a return date.

    I guess just plan for getting pregnant right away but also know that it might not happen that way.  Plan for a boring pregnancy but know that it might be the opposite.
    Lilypie Kids Birthday tickers Lilypie Kids Birthday tickers
  • I'd talk to your supervisor too. I now work at a nonprofit with only 5 staff members. One of my coworkers is about to start IVF so she told everyone because of the extra doctors appts she'll have to do. She didn't want us to wonder if she had a serious illness.

    On the upside of disclosing, she also was able to request (and get!) short term disability added to our company benefits. Major bonus for me as we'd like to go for #2 sometime in the next year.

    At my previous nonprofit, I was the first and to-date ONLY person to take a maternity leave in its 40yr history. I wasn't eligible for FMLA (less than 50employees) but I got 2 weeks before birth and 12 weeks after anyway.

    I'm sure they value you enough, especially with that much committed funding, to hold your job. If they don't, best to find out ASAP before surprise medical issues or even run of the mill sick days come up. There are a LOT of sick days in baby's first year.
  • If you feel comfortable, I would talk to your supervisor about it.  Each pregnancy is different - same with every delivery.  I've had two c-sections, neither planned.  Medically, recovery is 6 weeks for a vaginal delivery and 8 weeks for a c-section.  Meaning my OB couldn't "medically keep" me off of work any longer than 8 weeks since I had c-sections.  I did qualify for FMLA and took 12 weeks.  I was also lucky and had pretty boring pregnancies.  One lady at work was pulled off of work because of complications 10 weeks prior to having the baby.  She didn't plan for that - no one did.  Her FMLA is used up.  She's now in discussion with her supervisor and HR about a return date.

    I guess just plan for getting pregnant right away but also know that it might not happen that way.  Plan for a boring pregnancy but know that it might be the opposite.
    This is so true.  I actually had to cut back on work a LOT when I was pregnant with DD because I was so sick - it scares me to have to do that again but it's only temporary.  Hope for the best but prepare for the worst.
    Baby Birthday Ticker Ticker
  • Thanks all! I'm actually surprised the way the advice landed, as I had been leaning towards not saying anything just for professional distance reasons. @shakinros‌ it's nice to run into someone else with a tiny employer. I'm glad it worked out so well for you! Bed rest before birth is also something I hadn't considered.

    I'll ask my boss when a good time presents itself. She's very nice and pro-family so it won't be a hard conversation. I will also be the first one ever to take maternity leave and then return full time or close to it.
  • @Xstatic3333‌
    It's not a bad idea to think ahead. If you were on bedrest, could you work from home? It's one thing if you're dealing with high blood pressure, work stress wouldn't help. But if they just didn't want you on your feet, could you do quite a bit from home?
    Lilypie Kids Birthday tickers Lilypie Kids Birthday tickers
  • @Xstatic3333‌
    It's not a bad idea to think ahead. If you were on bedrest, could you work from home? It's one thing if you're dealing with high blood pressure, work stress wouldn't help. But if they just didn't want you on your feet, could you do quite a bit from home?

    I could do some things from home. A large part of my job is visiting schools and holding workshops, however, so that would clearly be out. I also maintain 7 small gardens; as cheesy as the term is, I wear many hats. If I was out October-December, no problem. February-May, huge problem. June-September, medium problem. They'd just need someone to cover the gardens.
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