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My mom only spent one night in the hospital after I was born. She might have left the same day if I had been born in the morning, instead of the afternoon. Once she got home, she got right back to work. My dad set her up on couch with a phone and a police and fire scanner to listen for possible breaking news.
My mom only spent one night in the hospital after I was born. She might have left the same day if I had been born in the morning.
Only a few weeks later, she was off the couch and in the air — sent to New Mexico by CNN to cover, of all things, a story about a woman who was duped into selling her baby. What was supposed to be an overnight trip turned into a week and what would have been a pause on breast feeding turned into an abrupt weaning for me. Did I mention it was also Christmas?
When I first heard this story, I thought it was badass. My mom was tough and resilient and a dedicated journalist. But 14 years into the same career and now with two kids of my own — one only 10 weeks old — I think it’s also insane. And sad.
It’s a scandal that our country didn’t then — and doesn’t now — do more to support families.
My mom wasn’t having it all. She didn’t have a choice. Neither of my parents did. They were self-employed, co-founders of their own newsgathering operation; a tiny upstart they called Los Angeles News Service. Every hour they spent not chasing a story was an hour they weren’t making money for dinner or rent. So work always had to come first. And there was definitely no paid time off to bond with a new baby.
For most American parents, nothing has changed since then. While some states have paid family leave policies and Congress passed a 12-week paid leave policy for all federal employees in 1993, only 20 percent of private sector workers are as lucky. That means 80 percent are in the same situation as my parents — making a choice between a paycheck and newborn.
Again, that is insane.








