National Post

Harassed for having a kid, says Canadian dad in Japan

- SHARON KIRKEY

When Glen Wood told his Japanese bosses he intended to take paternity leave to look after his newborn son, the Canadian financial analyst said he was treated “like I had committed some sort of crime.”

The 47- year- old single father and former manager of global sales at Mitsubishi UFJ Morgan Stanley Securities Co. in Tokyo alleges he was harassed to the point of mental and physical collapse after he exercised his right to a leave when his son Alexander was born two years ago.

His lawyers have filed a temporary injunction against the Japanese brokerage and have asked a Tokyo court to order the firm to reinstate him to full employee status.

The company said it encourages employees to take parental leave. But Wood said he’s a victim of what is known in Japan as patahara — paternity harassment. Wood said he was incrementa­lly demoted before he was put on unpaid leave in October after rejecting what he said amounted to a low-level clerical position and a more than 50-per-cent pay cut.

“It was like junior high school girls’ type of behaviour — they shut me out.”

In an email to the Post, MUFJ Morgan Stanley said it has “actively encouraged the taking of childcare leave for some time, and addressed the taking of childcare leave by Mr. Glen in good faith.”

Despite one of the most liberal paternity leave laws among developed nations — men, like women, are entitled to a year’s leave, generally at about 60 per cent of their salaries — the number of working men who take paternity leave in Japan has never topped three per cent (the government wants to increase that to 13 per cent by 2020).

A 2014 survey by Japan’s largest organizati­on of labour unions found more than one in 10 men have been refused paternity leave or harassed for even requesting it.

Wood was raised on his mother’s family’s farm in St. Ann’s, Ont., and attended university in the U.S. on scholarshi­ps. He holds an MBA from the University of Pennsylvan­ia and, over his 18-year career as a financial analyst, he has worked at Deutsche Bank and Goldman Sachs. Mitsubishi UFJ Morgan Stanley hired him about six years ago.

According to his lawyers, Wood was harassed solely because he decided to have a child.

“Japanese view employees basically as soldiers,” said Wood, who is fluent in the language. “You’re 100 per cent committed to the company. Men basically don’t go home and, if they try to spend time with family, it is a very negative thing.”

But full- time employees are hard to fire because of rigid labour laws and employer contracts, he said. “If they don’t like someone for some reason, they harass them until they quit.”

In August 2015, Wood told his bosses he and his partner were going to have a baby. (He’s now raising the child as a single father.) When he informed them he would need to take a leave, “they were very negative. Their first response was ‘ no, there’s nothing, you just can’t do it.’ ” His son was born in October of that year. Wood was eventually granted leave in December after a DNA test proved paternity.

When Wood returned to work three months later, after hiring a full- time nurse, “the first day back my boss called me in and said, ‘ you’ve got a child now and basically you can’t do your job.’”

Wood, who worked 14-plus hour days managing a global sales team and travelling to overseas offices, said he was reassigned to a menial job.

He grew depressed. “They wouldn’t tell me about meetings, or they would give me the wrong time for meetings. It was pretty pedantic type of things they were doing just to try to drive me crazy.”

One day, “I actually fell over at work.” He took a medical leave and, when he came back six months later, Wood said he was offered “basically a secretaria­l position” at less than half his annual salary. He rejected the offer and hired a lawyer.

“They stopped my compensati­on and now I’m getting nothing, but they’re keeping me as an employee of the company because it’s illegal to fire me,” he said.

Wood is not a permanent resident and needs a salary to keep his visa to stay in Japan.

Last year, Japan recorded fewer than one million new births for the first time in its modern history, according to Geopolitic­al Monitor.

“Why aren’t people having babies? I’m one very obvious reason why,” Wood said.

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