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		Pushed out by pandemic, women struggle to regain footing in U.S. job 
		market
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		 [March 04, 2021]  By 
		Jonnelle Marte and Aleksandra Michalska 
 (Reuters) - Katy McAvoy hoped she would 
		have more time for her job search after her 5-year-old daughter started 
		in-person kindergarten in mid-November after months of virtual learning 
		due to the pandemic.
 
 But the school near Grand Rapids, Michigan closed again a week later as 
		COVID-19 infections surged there and across much of the country.
 
 The unpredictable schedule made it difficult for McAvoy to find time for 
		interviews and networking or to figure out a feasible work schedule.
 
 So even though school opened again in January, McAvoy, who was 
		furloughed from her job with a local arts organization last June and 
		permanently laid off in November, decided to stop searching. "What do 
		you say to an employer in that situation?" said McAvoy, 41. "They're 
		going to hire someone who doesn’t need a bunch of exceptions."
 
 After being hit disproportionately by pandemic-related job losses last 
		year, women in the United States are struggling to get back to work.
 
		
		 
		
 A slowdown in the jobs recovery, obstacles to securing child care and 
		concerns about workplace flexibility are making it difficult for women 
		to recoup the jobs they lost - and threaten to undo some of the economic 
		gains women made before the pandemic.
 
 The U.S. Labor Department will issue another update Friday when it 
		releases the jobs report for February, but as of January, women 
		accounted for slightly more than half of the 10 million jobs that were 
		lost during the crisis, even though they typically make up a little less 
		than half the work force.
 
 The hurdles are pushing women to abandon the workplace at higher rates 
		than men: More than 2.5 million women left the labor force between 
		February 2020 and January of this year, compared to 1.8 million men.
 
 Vice President Kamala Harris called the exodus a "national emergency" 
		during a video call in February with Democratic lawmakers and activists. 
		"Our economy cannot fully recover unless women can participate fully," 
		she said.
 
 (Graphic: Women leaving the labor force at higher rates Women leaving 
		the labor force at higher rates: 
		https://graphics.reuters.com/
 USA-FED/FULL-EMPLOYMENT
 /qmyvmxxompr/chart.png)
 
 WOMEN NEED SUPPORT
 
 With labor market gains slowing and employment in some industries where 
		women are overrepresented - including leisure and hospitality - 
		recovering more slowly, some women may need help moving into different 
		lines of work, said C. Nicole Mason, the chief executive of the 
		Institute for Women's Policy Research. "Some women are not going to be 
		able to return to jobs that were lost," said Mason.
 
 School closures and the shift to virtual learning also 
		disproportionately affect working moms, research shows.
 
 (Graphic: An uneven jobs recovery An uneven jobs recovery:
		
		https://graphics.reuters.com/USA-ECONOMY/FISCAL/
 xegvblzowvq/chart.png)
 
 An analysis by researchers at the Federal Reserve Bank of Chicago found 
		that the share of women who were either employed or looking for work, 
		known as the labor force participation rate, dropped more severely in 
		the spring and fall of 2020 for mothers between the ages of 25 and 54 
		than it did for people without children. Black women, single mothers and 
		those without college educations saw the biggest impact.
 
 "Given the persistence of the effects thus far, it would be somewhat 
		surprising to see much of a reversal until schools and day care 
		facilities normalize their operations," the Chicago Fed researchers 
		wrote in a letter published in January.
 
		
            [to top of second column] | 
            
			 
            
			Katy McAvoy works on her food blog in her living room with the 
			company of her dog Molly in Grand Rapids, Michigan, U.S., March 2, 
			2021. REUTERS/Emily Elconin 
            
			 
President Joe Biden’s $1.9 trillion coronavirus aid bill, which was passed by 
the House, included funding for schools, subsidies for child care costs and 
support for the child care industry, which is struggling with higher costs and 
reduced revenue during the crisis. The bill still needs Senate approval.
 AFRAID TO BE JUDGED
 
 When Alisha Zucker has job interviews, she tries not to bring up being a parent.
 
Before the pandemic, Zucker, 41, spent more than 10 years working in educational 
publishing, most recently as an executive editor designing the curriculum that 
teachers and students use in classrooms. After being laid off in September, 
Zucker is now freelancing and looking for a full-time job.
 "I'm worried that I will be judged for having to take care of my kids, or maybe 
they'll think that I'm unreliable," said Zucker, who has seven-year old boy and 
girl twins and a three-year-old boy. "I try not to mention it, even though I 
think it's a huge asset. Moms get stuff done."
 
Flexibility will be key to helping women who need to oversee their children's 
virtual schooling get back to work.
 For jobs with easily adjustable work schedules, such as positions in management, 
the ratio of mothers working did not change significantly during the pandemic, 
according to a research paper published in February by the San Francisco Federal 
Reserve. But for occupations with stricter schedules, such as those in 
education, women with children saw a "pronounced decline" in employment compared 
to women without children.
 
 Zucker says she is grateful that her husband, a computer programmer, is still 
working and they have the help of a nanny. But finding long periods of time to 
work uninterrupted in their two-bedroom apartment in New York City has been 
difficult, especially with school alternating frequently between in person and 
virtual.
 
 When Zucker has a meeting or interview, she locks herself in the bedroom, using 
an ironing board as a desk. She is also productive after her children are 
asleep.
 
 Zucker said she hopes to find an employer that trusts her to complete tasks on 
her own schedule. "I can get my work done," she said.
 
 McAvoy said that when her daughter was doing remote schooling, she worked with 
her from 9 a.m. to about 1 p.m., helping with assignments and making sure the 
5-year-old was engaged in the virtual lessons. After lunch, that left her about 
three hours in the afternoon for potential job interviews. But without child 
care she would need to keep her daughter entertained with the television or a 
smartphone app.
 
 Because her husband works out of the home as an audio engineer producing virtual 
events, he is not available to help with child care during the day.
 
 So when schools shut down again last fall after only a week open, McAvoy was 
crushed. Now that her daughter is back at school, she is using her time to work 
on a blog about recipes and cocktails - an outlet she hopes will lead to income.
 
 But the possibility of school shutting again always looms. "I feel like I’m 
failing if I’m just putting my child in front of a TV all day so I can do this," 
she said.
 
 (Reporting by Jonnelle Marte and Aleksandra Michalska; Editing by Andrea Ricci)
 
				 
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