County Council approves plan to create parental leave pilot program

The King County Council on Monday unanimously approved a proposal to create a one-year pilot program to offer up to 12 weeks of paid parental leave, making King County one of about a dozen public employers across the country to offer this type of program.

From a press release:

The King County Council on Monday unanimously approved a proposal to create a one-year pilot program to offer up to 12 weeks of paid parental leave, making King County one of about a dozen public employers across the country to offer this type of program.

The program was proposed by County Executive Dow Constantine.

“I’m proud that King County is among the leading employers in the nation to offer a program that has a positive, lifelong impact on a child’s development,” Constantine said in a press release. “It also demonstrates our commitment to recruiting and retaining the talented workforce we need to deliver the best outcomes for our community.”

The one-year pilot program will start Jan. 1, 2016.

King County joins a few other major employers in the region – including Microsoft, Amazon, the Gates Foundation and the City of Seattle – to begin offering paid-parental leave as a way to attract high-caliber talent. King County and Seattle are the only public employers in the state to offer this type of program. Slightly more than a dozen governments — mostly cities — offer paid parental leave, though most do not offer as much as King County.

The program aligns with Constantine’s Best Starts for Kids initiative, designed to improve the health and well-being of the region by focusing on birth through 5, when 92 percent of brain growth occurs.

It will also confront the inequity that exists in the county’s existing leave policies, which are less accessible to newer employees and have an adverse impact on those who are at the lower end of the pay scale, according to a press release.

“Providing paid parental leave is the right thing to do for a progressive employer like King County, and an essential piece of the compensation structure for a best-run government that attracts and keeps quality employees,” said Dustin Frederick, Business Manager for the Public Safety Employees Union Local 519 and King County Coalition of Unions Co-Chair.