As if babies didnât create enough havoc in the lives of their dads, they are now threatening to disrupt their employers, too. The government wants to give new fathers three monthsâ paternity leave on ÂŁ106 a week. But in the macho world of construction, how many would actually take it?⊠Illustration by Max Schindler
As an industry staffed largely by men, construction has felt the impact of changes in maternity leave legislation less than other sectors. So when the government announced its Work and Families Bill last week, the idea of extending working mothersâ statutory allowance from six to nine months didnât cause much of a stir.
The possibility of their partners being able to take the last three months of that leave instead, however, is a different matter. As they would receive statutory pay, the government has gone even further in the bill than the option six monthsâ unpaid leave that had been touted. The prospect of losing valuable manpower on site or key members of management staff for months at a time â as opposed to the two weeks available to fathers at the moment â is potentially alarming for construction firms that are struggling to meet project deadlines with an ever diminishing workforce.
The question is, how many men will actually take the extended leave? Construction as an industry is not known for its enlightened approach to gender roles and the statutory allowance of ÂŁ106 a week will mean a significant drop in salary for most. So how worried should firms be?
Certainly the Construction Confederation doesnât seem too anxious. âWe donât see there being much take-up,â says Gerry Lean, director of industrial relations. âItâs the culture of the industry â itâs a little bit behind the times. I canât see a large number of building site workers saying, âIâll stay home and look after the child while the wife goes to workâ.â
Besides, he continues, itâs not as if all the eligible men in the industry are going to suddenly father babies at the same time. Nevertheless, the confederation will be calling for men to give three monthsâ notice if they do intend to take paternity leave. After all, he says: âIf a ladyâs going out on maternity leave, itâs pretty obvious. But, if all of a sudden an employer is told, âNext week Iâm going to take three monthsâ paternity leaveâ, thatâs not going to work.â
With 365 employees, 80% of whom are men, medium-sized contractor Botes is exactly the kind of firm you might expect to be dreading the loss of its male staff to childcare â but corporate marketing manager Eddie Fowler says heâs not worried either. âWe donât feel itâll have much effect because most people who work within the industry canât afford to take time off on statutory pay, and most are the breadwinners in their families.â
He even goes on to make the cynical suggestion that âmaybe thatâs why the government did it; they bring in a piece of legislation that looks nice and family friendly in the knowledge that it wonât actually happenâ.
But not everyone is so sanguine. Whether people take it or not, the system is undoubtedly going to be complex to administer and Chris Magee, managing director of 150-strong builder Knowles, fears that it will be âanother burden weâve got to manageâ.
At Chase Norton, a Midlands-based contractor with 120 workers, non-executive chairman George Marsh agrees. He estimates that there have already been 160 changes to employment regulations in the past year: âFor a medium-sized business, itâs quite a challenge keeping up.â Even though the government is picking up the tab for fathersâ time off, thereâs still the question of replacing people. âItâs a significant cost to us. Ideally we need continuity and if people are out, we have a disruption in our operations.â
He also believes the culture of the industry is changing, which might worry the Construction Confederation. âWeâve noticed a trend â more people are taking a degree of leave when their partner has a baby.â
However devoted a family man you are, youâve still got to pay the mortgage, and the decision on who looks after the children and who goes back to work will inevitably be a financial one.
I canât see a large number of building site workers saying, âIâll look after the child while the wife goes to workâGary Lean, Construction Confederation
Alan Baker, managing partner in charge of human resources at QS Gleeds, says that âyou can count on the fingers of one handâ the number of new fathers who have taken the current two-week paternity leave in his firm. âWe find that where thereâs a reduction in pay, people are reluctant to take it up.â
Revealingly, the situation is markedly different at Bovis Lend Lease, which gives new fathers four weeksâ off and pays both mothers and fathers their full salaries for the duration of leave. There, head of human resources John Davidson says that 21 people have taken those four weeks, 14 have taken two and a further three have taken one week off. âWe see it as something that helps with the attraction and retention of staff,â he says.
The impact on blue-collar workers may be a red herring â the three-month paternity swap is only available for families where both parents work. So unless the mother can earn more by returning to work than her partner, itâs going to mean a drop in the household income. Without putting too fine a point on it, itâs more likely to be the white-collar professionals of the construction industry who have the family set-up, not to mention the inclination, to take advantage of the governmentâs offer.
Ted Runciman, HR director at QS Currie & Brown, says his firm will definitely be taking into account the large numbers of potential fathers among its staff as it revamps its succession-planning policy. âThe sheer numbers give you a headache of how to plan ahead for it. We have to think carefully about continuity planning, and about who backs up who. I donât think large numbers will take it, but even a small number of key people can still present a planning situation we need to consider.â
Bovisâ Davidson warns that construction will feel the effects more keenly than other industries. âIn manufacturing or banking for example, policies such as flexitime can be made to work. But construction projects have fixed timelines. Three months is not a long time in career terms, but itâs big if youâre a senior manager on a project. It could have an enormous effect if the person is the lead consultant on a scheme.â
The male-dominated, sometimes macho, culture of the industry is not a reason for complacency over the impact of extended paternity leave, he believes, but something that has to change to minimise the potential hit. âObviously, anything that affects the male population is going to have a big impact on construction companies because the gender balance is so out of sync. If we had a more balanced workforce, it would even itself out.â
And perhaps this legislation, should it make it to the statute book, will have exactly that effect. Sandi Rhys-Jones, a non-executive director at contractor Simons Group, says she knows a number of successful women in the industry who rely on their husbands to look after the children. She has also noticed a general culture shift in favour of more involved fathers â her son recently took a week of paternity leave and ended up extending it to the full fortnight. âThe change in many menâs attitudes to the importance of family life is quite remarkable. Life is so much faster, busier, more dynamic these days and becoming a parent is such a change to your life that an increasing number of men decide to take time out and play a greater part.â
How far this will permeate into construction has yet to be seen, but perhaps HR directors should dust off that succession policy, just in case âŠ
Dadsâ army
Michael Stokes, director at consultant Precept
The practicalities of life mean that most people wonât take up the offer of ÂŁ106 a week. Although three months doesnât sound a long time, it would dent your reputation. But I have a young family so if I wanted to take a couple of months off, Iâd like that to be possible.
Andy Armstrong, graduate engineer at Faber Maunsell
Iâd like to take the paternity leave because I think itâs as important for the father to bond with the child as the mother. I think a lot of people will take more than two weeks, but maybe not the full three months.
Nick Francis, associate at architect
Piercy Conner
As a parent, I think it would be great. But I donât think a young small practice can subsidise that amount of time away. Also, Iâm married to another architect and itâs not the best-paid career in the world â it would be difficult to go from two full salaries down to one and the statutory pay.
Barry Laycock, associate at QS Davis Langdon
I donât know how many men would take it up, particularly in our profession. They might worry how it would be perceived or that it would put their careers on hold. It will also depend on how each family is set up. It might appeal if the woman is in a better job than her partner.
Jonathan Willcock, quality, health, safety and environment manager at EMCOR
I donât think I would take it â Iâve just become a father and I only took three days off. My job wouldnât allow me to take three months off â Iâd just have three monthsâ work to catch up on when I got back.
Andrew Bradley, associate director,
WT Partnership
I definitely wouldnât take three months off. In an industry where people are responsible for projects, disappearing for three months doesnât sound practical. And ÂŁ106 isnât that enticing â itâs effectively like not being paid. I had my daughter last December and I took annual leave.
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