The Hamilton Spectator

Some firms now offering ‘pawternity’ benefits

- GENE MARKS

Think having a baby is rough? Just try bringing home a new puppy.

All babies need is a couple of diaper changes, a few feedings and a burping session once in a while. But puppies? They need way more attention, particular­ly if you consider all the playing, the outdoor walks in the rain, the house training, the gnawing on furniture, the chewing of shoes, the non-stop barking and ... did I mention the house training?

You know what I’m talking about, puppy-owners. It’s exhausting.

But don’t worry. It’s 2018. The labour market is tight, good employees are in high demand and paid time off, particular­ly for new parents, is a hot benefit many firms are offering. Now some of these firms are taking this concept one step further and offering the ultimate solution to the ultimate first-world problem: paid time off specifical­ly for new pet owners. It’s called “pawternity,” and no, I am not joking.

“We offer maternity and paternity leave, and a pet is another member of the family,” the head of talent acquisitio­n at a data services firm told the Wall Street Journal last month. “We don’t discrimina­te just because they aren’t human.”

This is not the only firm that provides pet-related benefits. An article in Quartz reported on its growing popularity, with some companies offering up to a week of paid time off for new pet owners.

More and more of these firms — particular­ly in urban areas that attract a younger workforce — are also allowing pets to be brought to be work as well as other perks like pet insurance, time-off for veterinary appointmen­ts, pet adoption consulting and even — as I reported previously — pet bereavemen­t leave. “We look at it just as if you had a sick kid,” one business owner in the Journal piece said.

 ?? THE ASSOCIATED PRESS FILE PHOTO ?? An Amazon employee gives her dog a biscuit as the pair head into a company building in Seattle.
THE ASSOCIATED PRESS FILE PHOTO An Amazon employee gives her dog a biscuit as the pair head into a company building in Seattle.

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