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MoneyMonday, August 20, 2007 5:02 PM CDT
Companies welcome moms returning to work
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NEW YORK — Gina Thoma is taking a year off work to raise a family, but she’s still playing the corporate game.

As part of a new program at PricewaterhouseCoopers, the 42-year-old mother of three mingles at firm events, checks in with a career coach and attends seminars to keep her professional skills fresh.

“They’re keeping the door open for me, saying they would still like to have me,” said Thoma, who quit her job at the public accounting firm in January.

Once regarded as a career setback, taking extended time off work to care for children is no longer a liability as businesses fight to hold onto valuable female executives. A growing number of companies are rolling out lavish welcome mats for returning women, offering a spate of options that ease the transition back.

Women might act as “substitutes,” or take advantage of free professional courses, networking events and even lactation consultants. Flexible work schedules are more popular too, with many women opting to “phase back” to work after standard or extended maternity leave.

The programs come amid shifting attitudes about balancing work and family. Last month, a study by the Pew Research Center found 60 percent of working mothers now say part-time work is their ideal rather than full-time, compared to 48 percent a decade ago.

The emerging preference for part-time work clashes with reality, however: Three-quarters of working mothers have full-time jobs.

The discrepancy could signal employee dissatisfaction and is a wake-up call for companies to start providing flexible work-life arrangements to avoid turnover, said Suzanne Riss, editor-in-chief of Working Mother magazine.

In hopes of preventing an exodus of talent, a growing number of companies are offering ways for new mothers to balance family and work.

Of Working Mother’s 100 best companies last year, for

moms

From F1

example, 81 offered a variation of “phase back” plans for new mothers. The programs let women phase back to work at their own pace after maternity leave, perhaps starting by working a few hours a day before ramping back up to full time.

Other programs go much farther, providing personal time far beyond the 12 weeks of unpaid maternity leave guaranteed to most women under federal law.

However, the transition programs are typically reserved for a smaller subset of women in managerial or executive positions.

The Personal Pursuits program at Deloitte and Touche lets former employees stay connected through freelance assignments and career coaching. Participants likely won’t get the same exact job back — companies need to find permanent replacements — but the idea is that participants will return at a comparable level.

Similarly, the Full Circle program at PricewaterhouseCoopers lets women take up to five years off (unpaid) while staying connected to the firm through mentoring, free training classes and invitations to networking events.

“The message is that leaving is not only OK, but that (the firm) will do everything possible to help them return,” said Jennifer Allyn, managing director of gender retention and advancement at PricewaterhouseCoopers.

At IBM, many women work with managers to map out a personalized strategy for returning before going on extended leave. At Deloitte & Touche, employees can increase or decrease workloads depending on personal needs.

Such programs, which are typically intended for new mothers, mean women no longer have to pick between their career or their family, said Ellen Galinsky, president of the Families and Work Institute.

The shift reflects a broader transformation of the typical career trajectory in America. With more people adjusting workloads and taking “time outs” for personal reasons or to try a new field, the linear career path is no longer the only way up the corporate ladder, Galinsky said.

That doesn’t mean returning to work after a long absence is easy, especially in industries that can undergo radical changes in a short time. Former peers and subordinates may have moved on, clients may have changed, and new managers may be in place.

But for Thoma and others, the hope is to minimize such pitfalls.

Since leaving her job in January, Thoma has sat on a panel for the firm’s women’s networking group, lunched with her career coach and attended several firm social events. The firm flew her to Canada this month for a free training conference.

While Thoma doesn’t expect to get the same job back when she returns, the hope is that she’ll still be able to continue her rise up the corporate ladder. Thoma, a Marin County, Calif. resident, still plans to become a partner after she returns.

“My plan is to be out for one or two years,” she said. “At the same time, I don’t want to be bumped down.”

Take a look
Gina Thoma at her home with her son, Zach, and daughter, Malia, in San Rafael, Calif., Friday, July 20, 2007. (AP Photo/Eric Risberg)
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Reader comments on this story - 6 total

Note: All views and opinions expressed in reader comments are solely those of the individual submitting the comment, and not those of the Pantagraph or its staff.

To New Mom wrote on Sep 9, 2007 6:59 PM:

" Enjoy Canada, eh. The grass sure is green over there, eh? "

to well well well wrote on Aug 20, 2007 12:17 PM:

" Probably helps that Daddy is a State Farm exec. "

to well well well wrote on Aug 20, 2007 10:16 AM:

" We can't afford to live on one income - I'm not working so we can buy luxuries. what an ignorant comment. Moms need to stop talking like this and start supporting each other regardless of the choices we all make to survive, we're raising a future generation here. Last thing we need is to pass on attitude like that. "

Too Bad wrote on Aug 19, 2007 9:31 PM:

" Can't stay home or else I would. Instead, I have a no brainer job that pays great money so I'm able to come home and devote my mind and time to my child. "

well well well wrote on Aug 19, 2007 4:28 PM:

" Family values? What does that have to do with maternity leave? This country's family values is on the decline because there ARE so many working mothers, which in turn leave their kids at day care or expect the schools to raise their children. I know, if it both parents did not work, you would not be able to pay for all your luxuries. Do not get me wrong, maternity leave is a good thing. As a parent of 3, I decided it was more important to stay at home with my kids than go back to work. I can always find somewhere to work once they are all in school. "

new mom wrote on Aug 19, 2007 8:37 AM:

" It's about time that the U.S. started catching up! FMLA provides 12 weeks unpaid, and that is one of the shortest allowances of all countries in the world. Did you know that we are the ONLY "first-world" country besides Austraila that does NOT pay at least partially for maternity leave (and Australia at least gives you a year of unpaid leave)? FMLA doesn't even apply to everyone. I work for a small business, so they don't have to give me ANY time. I think it's time for our country to put its money where its mouth is in terms of our so-called "family values." I love this country with all my heart, but my recent experience was enough to make me seriously consider moving to Canada (they get one full year at 55% pay). "

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