Army Expands Pregnancy Leave Policies
Also: a cluster of suicides among crew of a drydocked aircraft carrier.
ABC News:
Army Revises Policies On Pregnancy, Parental Leave For Soldiers
The United States Army has announced new policies to expand soldiers' and their family's health. The 12-part directive expands previous policies such as allowing paid medical leave for pregnancies and pregnancy losses for soldiers and/or their spouses. It also creates new policies such as ones addressing soldiers and spouses going through fertilization treatment. (Dunn, 4/21)
Task & Purpose:
The Army Just Became The Only Service To Give Non-Birthing Parents Leave After A Miscarriage
The Army will now give both parents convalescent leave in the case of a miscarriage, stillbirth, or loss after birth. “The Army will be the only service so far to apply this convalescent leave to male soldiers, acknowledging emotional loss after this very significant life event,” Amy Kramer, the policy lead action officer, told reporters on Thursday. “So in addition to the convalescent leave provided to the female soldier that undergoes the actual miscarriage for physical healing and emotional healing, male soldiers, their spouses, will also be eligible.” (Britzky, 4/21)
And multiple suicides aboard one Navy ship are investigated —
NBC News:
At Least Five USS George Washington Shipmates Died By Suicide In Last Year
At least five U.S. sailors who served on the same aircraft carrier in Virginia have died by suicide in the last year, including three who died within a week earlier this month, military officials said Thursday. The string of suicides among USS George Washington sailors may indicate a larger mental health problem, according to experts, and it comes less than three years after a similar cluster of suicides on another Navy vessel. (Chan, 4/21)
Military.com:
10 Deaths In 10 Months: String Of Suicides On A Single Aircraft Carrier
The fact that the carrier is in the shipyards -- and for far longer than originally planned -- has created a difficult environment, according to the sailors who spoke to Military.com. The Nimitz-class aircraft carrier has been undergoing a refueling and complex overhaul at Newport News since 2017. The massive maintenance period, which typically lasts four years, is usually done halfway through a carrier's 50-year life to refuel the nuclear reactor and see to repairs and upgrades. In 2019, the ship was scheduled to be done in 2021. By 2020, that had changed to 2022. Danny Hernandez, a spokesman for Newport News Shipbuilding, told Military.com in an email that "COVID-19 impacts and unplanned growth work resulted in delays to the schedule." (Toropin, 4/20)