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Adobe Joins Tech Industry Push in Increasing Parental Leave

Adobe says the new policy was in the works before recent announcements by Netflix and Microsoft.

wellesenterprises / iStock

Software company Adobe Systems said Monday it is doubling the maternity leave it grants, making it the third company in the U.S. technology industry in a week to give new parents more paid time off.

New mothers at the California-based firm will receive 26 weeks of paid leave, up from 12 weeks, and primary caregivers and new parents will get 16 weeks of paid parental leave.

“We join an industry movement to better support our employees while striving towards increased workforce diversity,” said Donna Morris, Adobe senior vice president of People and Places.

Adobe has 13,500 employees globally, including 6,500 in the United States. About 30 percent are women.

In an interview, Morris said the new leave program had been in the planning stages for a long time and was not in response to announcements by video streaming company Netflix and Microsoft last week.

Netflix announced that its employees could take up to a year of paid maternity or paternity leave in the first year after the birth or adoption of a child. It also offered the flexibility of returning to work full- or part-time.

The move was seen as a game changer in the United States, which lags other developed countries in the amount of parental leave offered to employees. Paid maternity leave in the United States is usually about 30 days, according to Mary Tavarozzi, a senior consultant with benefit consultant group Towers Watson.

Microsoft also announced last week it was increasing benefits for parents, extending its fully paid leave for new parents to 12 weeks.

Morris said Adobe’s increased parental leave for new parents through childbirth, adoption, surrogacy and foster care, and maternity leave will become effective on Nov. 1.

She said the move was in line with changes in the tech industry, and aimed to increase the diversity of Adobe’s workforce and to support employees during major life changes.

(Reporting by Patricia Reaney, editing by Jill Serjeant and Frances Kerry)

This article originally appeared on Recode.net.

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