fordham2
06-05-2006, 02:51 AM
I am eight months pregnant and was just informed last week that I will be unemployed as of June 30. This is not a case of pregnancy discrimination, as the company is ceasing operations and everyone at our location is losing their jobs. My issue right now is with health insurance, as I am weeks away from delivering my second child and my husband’s employer does not offer health insurance. The only severance I am being offered is two weeks pay which would not even cover one month of COBRA, so I am preparing a letter to the parent company who is shutting us down in which I plan to ask for them to cover 2-3 months of COBRA premiums. (After COBRA we will have to contract individually with an insurer until I find a job and benefits kick in. At $1,400 a month we simply cannot COBRA forever.)
One point I wish to make in my request is that once I deliver the baby, I will cease to be ‘Able to work, Available for work, and Actively seeking work’ for approximately one month and therefore unable to collect unemployment during that time period, however, this is the point I need to clarify through this forum. My research on unemployment in Maryland has found that if you become ‘sick or temporarily disabled’ (pregnancy specifically is mentioned nowhere, though I know it legally qualifies as disability, as normally STD would apply) you can file a ‘sick claim’ and they will make the determination as to whether you can continue to collect a reduced benefit or any benefit at all. I called unemployment to try and verify what would happen in my situation but the rep could not comment one way or the other, as I am not yet even in the unemployment system. Has anyone had experience with going on unemployment sick claim and what was the determination? Don’t get me wrong, I don’t believe I should be able to collect from the state during the time when I would obviously not meet the ‘triple A’ test, I just need to verify this to use as ammo in my letter to my soon-to-be former employer. I believe I need to make a factual appeal, rather than an emotional one. I understand it’s not their problem at all that I’m pregnant, but the timing of these events is going to have a severe financial impact on my family, and as they are the ones taking away my livelihood, I feel I should be compensated more than two weeks pay.
One last question: I only get one chance to make this request. In this situation, would you consult with an attorney just to help you write a severance negotiation letter to make it more compelling? And if you’ve read this far, thanks very much for your time!
One point I wish to make in my request is that once I deliver the baby, I will cease to be ‘Able to work, Available for work, and Actively seeking work’ for approximately one month and therefore unable to collect unemployment during that time period, however, this is the point I need to clarify through this forum. My research on unemployment in Maryland has found that if you become ‘sick or temporarily disabled’ (pregnancy specifically is mentioned nowhere, though I know it legally qualifies as disability, as normally STD would apply) you can file a ‘sick claim’ and they will make the determination as to whether you can continue to collect a reduced benefit or any benefit at all. I called unemployment to try and verify what would happen in my situation but the rep could not comment one way or the other, as I am not yet even in the unemployment system. Has anyone had experience with going on unemployment sick claim and what was the determination? Don’t get me wrong, I don’t believe I should be able to collect from the state during the time when I would obviously not meet the ‘triple A’ test, I just need to verify this to use as ammo in my letter to my soon-to-be former employer. I believe I need to make a factual appeal, rather than an emotional one. I understand it’s not their problem at all that I’m pregnant, but the timing of these events is going to have a severe financial impact on my family, and as they are the ones taking away my livelihood, I feel I should be compensated more than two weeks pay.
One last question: I only get one chance to make this request. In this situation, would you consult with an attorney just to help you write a severance negotiation letter to make it more compelling? And if you’ve read this far, thanks very much for your time!
