minoanmiss: Minoan men carrying offerings in a procession (Offering Bearers)
minoanmiss ([personal profile] minoanmiss) wrote in [community profile] agonyaunt2020-12-01 04:30 am

Ask a Manager: I couldn’t use sick time after my boyfriend had a stroke because we’re not married

I have a pre-COVID question about something that is still bothering me after more than a year. I am a single person and I do not have immediate plans to marry or start a domestic partnership. Last October, my then-boyfriend of a year had a stroke at only 30 years old. I received the call from the ER on my way to the office and let my supervisor know that I needed to go to the hospital and that I would be late to work. I’m employed at a large research university which is a perennial “Best Places to Work” list winner and espouses values about supporting employees, mental health, etc. I have hundreds of sick time hours and extremely little vacation time.


After my boyfriend stabilized, I went to my office to collect my computer and some work I needed and spoke with my supervisor about my boyfriend’s condition and that I needed to be in the hospital because he didn’t have any family in the area and I was his emergency contact. I was gobsmacked when I was told I could not use my sick time to be in the hospital with him. Our HR portal allows employees to use sick time for 22 types of relationships (children, stepchildren, in-laws, grandparents-in-law, etc.) and my manager said that my boyfriend did not qualify for any of them because he wasn’t my spouse and we did not live together. I pretty much had a breakdown in her office because I was under so much pressure and stress. It felt, and still feels, like my organization (and my manager) let me down, treated me as “less than,” and failed to live up to the values the organization uses as a recruiting tool. Effectively, it communicated to me that my relationships do not matter and afterwards, out of bitterness and anger, I actively disengaged in any work that was not directly assigned to me and withdrew from volunteer projects. I’m really happy to now be leaving the organization, but I can’t help but feel like I may have missed an important memo — are single people supposed to just constantly lie to their managers in order to have the same privileges and compassion as married people?


No, your organization just sucks. I’m sorry.

A decent manager would have said, “We don’t have a formal category for this but obviously he is like family to you and you should take the time you need. I’ll handle it with HR.”

It’s true that society as a whole — not just employers — treats marriages and domestic partnerships differently than it does people in relationships living separately. It’s a weird thing. If you and your boyfriend shared a house, I suspect you might have gotten a different response even without being married. People see not cohabitating as indicating something about the seriousness of the relationship … which is problematic, because you can have a serious and long-term relationship living apart and you can have a marriage that’s little more than hostile roommates. Part of that is about the legal ties of marriage, of course, but you usually see cohabiting unmarried relationships get taken more seriously than non-cohabiting ones.

Anyway, it’s understandable that employers need to put some limits on benefits usage, but they need to be flexible when a situation comes up that’s still within the spirit of their policy, if not the letter.
harpers_child: melaka fray reading from "Tales of the Slayers". (Default)

[personal profile] harpers_child 2020-12-02 12:53 am (UTC)(link)
There is something that is pinging my queer radar and I can't put my finger on it.
harpers_child: melaka fray reading from "Tales of the Slayers". (Default)

[personal profile] harpers_child 2020-12-02 03:50 am (UTC)(link)
It may be something about un-gendered LW, the phrase "domestic partnership", boyfriend in the hospital, and the closing question all combining.

It may just be I born in the early 80s and absorbed a certain amount of background radiation (as it were) from news reports on the AIDS crisis. Someone not being able to spend time with a significant other in the hospital jabs me in my tender places.
lilysea: Wheelchair user: wheelchair fighting (Wheelchair user: wheelchair fighting)

[personal profile] lilysea 2020-12-02 05:02 am (UTC)(link)
The dismissiveness towards unmarried couples was (and often still is) applied to dismiss same-sex couples? At least that was one thing this made me think of.

Also people who are on government financial support because they are too Disabled/too chronically ill to work

cannot marry without losing their benefits

so a "unmarried couples don't count" attitude

means people cannot take leave to eg attend medical appointments with a partner [many Drs take women's serious health issues more seriously if they bring a male partner to a medical appt; also partners can drive the patient to the appt; take notes; etc]

or provide hands on medical care

to partners who are too Disabled/chronically ill to work

who are the people who most NEED their partner to be able to access paid leave