Here at Mamamia, we always love to hear about good men doing great work.
We Love. Love. Love it.
Did we mention we LOVE IT?
Whether it’s a man supporting and advancing feminism, seriously tackling gender inequity issues, or simply making a woman’s life a little easier, a little more joyful, we love to see it, read it, feel it.
CEO of Aurizon, Australia’s largest rail freight operator and a top 50 ASX company, Lance Hockridge, has just announced the company’s new shared care parental arrangements.
And he is now officially one of Mamamia’s Good Men.
Aurizon’s plans have made headlines around the world, and are different to anything you’ve seen in a HR document before.
These new parental arrangements are putting dad front and centre into a baby’s first year and encouraging female employees to return to work.
The plan is to incentivise men (female partners of same sex couples are included in the scheme) to take on primary care of their baby in the first year. And they’re doing this with money. Because money talks.
The company is offering a female employee who returns to full-time work in the first year after her baby is born AND whose partner has taken on primary care of that child 150% of that female employee’s salary (up to six months).
Meanwhile, male Aurizon employees are being given a domestic push and if their partner returns to full-time work they are required to take on primary care of their baby for at least 13 weeks during their child’s first 12 months. The male Aurizon employee staying home with the baby would receive half of his salary in this situation (up to six months).
It’s a deliberate “interventionist” approach on the part of the Queensland based company.
“Clearly there are a whole host of cultural, societal and financial reasons why the [gender] imbalance exists,” Hockridge told Mamamia.