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Women s History Month: Coronavirus pandemic taking women out of the workforce

Sandra Bookman has more on what it is and why we celebrate it. Now, two recently unemployed women both mothers are making some tough choices as they care for their families. I loved my job, Leslie Chiaramonte said. I worked really hard for the position I had, and it didn t matter. Stephanie Kinley feels her pain. Where you fought to get at, you have now fight to try to get back to where we were, she said. And it s no fault of your own. They are both out of work because of COVID, as they needed to care for their children learning at home.

Women s History Month: In-person learning, daycare are keys to getting women back to work amid COVID pandemic

Mara Bolis, with Oxfam America, says childcare is part of infrastructure. Do you know that we put in the Cares Act, we put more money into Delta airlines than we did into the entire childcare sector? she said. We do not expect anyone to go to work without a road on which to drive to work. That s where we have to get to. We have to get to recognizing the fact that childcare is essential infrastructure that deserves investment, and it will garner returns in terms of GDP growth, in terms of wages, and in terms of tax revenue. Another indicator is American history. A century ago, after the 1918 flu pandemic, the roaring 20s brought the economy back to life as people celebrated and traveled. Businesses boomed, and spending and jobs took off.

I am a better mom : After quitting their jobs during the pandemic to care for family, here s how it changed these women

I am a better mom : After quitting their jobs during the pandemic to care for family, here s how it changed these women Swapna Venugopal Ramaswamy, Rockland/Westchester Journal News A mom s decisions about work during the pandemic Replay Video UP NEXT NEW YORK – More than 2.2 million women left the U.S. workforce since the start of the pandemic. Last fall, there were 1.6 million fewer mothers in the labor force than would be expected without COVID-19-related school closures, according to an analysis by Ernie Tedeschi, an economist at the investment banking advisory firm Evercore. © Tania Savayan/The Journal News Leslie Chiaramonte gets a kiss from her daughter Phoenix, 3, at the Nardone Funeral Home, the family business in Peekskill, Feb. 25, 2021. Leslie quit her job as a nurse last fall because of hybrid learning to stay home with her two children. Now, she is pursuing her funeral director license so she can help her husband out in the family busines

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