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Would you and your partner take time off work if companies offered 6 months paid parental leave for all?

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JustineBMumsnet · 26/11/2018 17:11

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Having a new baby is an exciting time regardless of whether you’re a mum or a dad, and spending time with them in those first few months is a precious experience. A year ago Aviva introduced its equal paid parental leave policy, where all employees can take up to 12 months off, with no need for mums to share their maternity allowance. With this in mind, Aviva would like to hear your thoughts on giving all parents the same amount of time off.

Here’s what Caroline Prendergast, Interim Chief People Officer at Aviva has to say: “We decided to make all parents at Aviva eligible for the same amount of paid and unpaid time off, regardless of gender, sexual orientation or how they became a parent. We thought that dads would want to spend time with their new arrivals, just as mums do. One year on, our experience shows that with financial barriers removed, they do just that.”

You can find out more about Aviva as an employer here.

If all companies offered 6 months paid parental leave, do you think your spouse or partner would be prepared take the time off work to share childcare duties? If not, why not?

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Would you and your partner take time off work if companies offered 6 months paid parental leave for all?

JustineBMumsnet · 03/12/2018 11:15

Hi all, thanks for your posts. We have some more information below from Anthony Fitzpatrick from Aviva:

"Hi everyone, thanks for your comments. It’s great to see there’s so much interest in parental leave!

I’m responsible for employment policy at Aviva and I hoped it might be useful to clarify a few things. We give all parents – dads and mums – the same entitlement to parental leave, with no need to share. In the UK this means up to 12 months for all parents, including six months at full pay. So hopefully this removes financial barriers that may prevent people taking parental leave.

Unlike shared parental leave, dads who work for Aviva can take time off without using any of their partner’s parental leave entitlement - and they can take time off while the mum is on her maternity leave too.

I hope this helps to make things a bit clearer.

All the best, Anthony."

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