"It is mandatory for the father to take a parental
leave of 28 days, consecutive or interpolated, in the 42 days following the
birth of the child, five of which are taken consecutively immediately after
this", establishes the norm approved in the working group on labour
changes foreseen in the Decent Work Agenda.
The approved Government proposal also provides that, after
the 28-day leave, the father is entitled to seven days of leave, consecutive or
interpolated (instead of the current five working days), provided that they are
taken simultaneously with the enjoyment of initial parental leave by the
mother.
"In case of hospitalisation of the child during the
period after childbirth", the father's mandatory leave "is suspended,
at the request of the father, for the duration of the hospitalisation",
establishes the proposal.
The Government's proposal to amend labour legislation,
within the scope of the Decent Work Agenda, entered parliament in June, without
the agreement of the Social Concert, having been approved in general terms on
July 8 with favourable votes from the PS, abstention from the PSD, Chega, BE,
PAN and Livre and against IL and PCP.
The beginning of the discussion started on the 29th of
November, with the entry into force of the new labour rules scheduled for the
beginning of 2023.
That is still absurdly low. A father should be present and is full time needed more than 28 days after his newborn comes to this world.
By Diogo F. from Lisbon on 22 Dec 2022, 18:18