Government backs paid miscarriage bereavement leave

The government has said it supports paid bereavement leave for couples who experience a miscarriage.
Business Minister Justin Madders told MPs he âfully acceptsâ the principle of bereavement leave for pregnancy loss and promised to look at adding the right to the Employment Rights Bill.
Currently employees are eligible for parental bereavement leave if they or their partner have a stillbirth after 24 weeks of pregnancy.
Labour MP Sarah Owen, who chairs the Women and Equalities Committee, has been calling for this right to be extended in cases where miscarriages take place before 24 weeks.
Speaking in the House of Commons, Madders said: âBereavement is not an illness, itâs not a holiday and it does need its own special category.â
He added: âI am grateful to the work of the Women and Equalities Committee for raising the important issue of miscarriage leave.
âThe loss of a baby at any stage is an incredibly difficult personal experience and the inquiry they conducted demonstrated a clear gap in support for those who experience pregnancy loss and need time to recover and grieve.â
He said Owen had shown âgreat braveryâ in speaking about the own experience of having a miscarriage.
In 2021, Owen told MPs that after her own miscarriage she felt physically better in a few days but had âall the classic signsâ of grieving.
âI could not eat, I could not sleep. I really did not hold much hope that life would ever get brighter,â she said.
Owen and her committee have proposed changes to the Employment Rights Bill which would ensure parents bereaved as a result of a pregnancy loss are entitled to two weeks of leave.
During a debate on the bill on Tuesday, Madders said: âWe fully accept the principle of bereavement leave for pregnancy loss, as raised in the amendments, and we look forward to further discussions with [Owen] and [peers] as the Bill moves on to its next stages in the Lords.â
The bill aims to strengthen workersâ rights in areas including unfair dismissals, flexible working and sick pay.
Opening the debate, Madders said it was a âlandmark billâ that would âtackle low pay, poor working conditions and poor job securityâ.
Greg Smith, the Conservative shadow business minister, said he backed the government on bereavement leave for pregnancy loss but added that in the âvast majorityâ of the bill the government had got the balance between the rights employees and employers âwrongâ.
Smith has proposed several amendments to the bill which would require the government to carry out impact assessments on the measures being introduced.
Former Labour minister Louise Haigh and Lib Dem MP Layla Moran have proposed an amendment which would ban non-disclosure agreements (NDAs) in cases of sexual misconduct, abuse, harassment and discrimination in the workplace.
Haigh, who resigned as transport secretary last year, said: âNDAs have a perfectly legitimate use in business to protect commercial confidentiality and trade.
âBut they are frequently misused in order to bully people into silence when they have already suffered at work.â
Madders said it was âan important issue that warrants further considerationâ but did not commit to accepting their amendment.
Stella Creasy, Labour MP for Walthamstow, is trying to amend the bill to provide greater protections for paternity or parental partner leave.
The bill currently gives workers the right to paternity leave from day one of their employment, instead of the current 26 weeks.
Creasyâs amendment would compel the government to review paternity and parental partner leave and set out a timeline for implementing any recommendations.
She said the UK was âbehind the curve on how we treat dadsâ compared to other similar countries.
The government has not committed to accepting her amendment, which has strong backing from other Labour MPs.