Sunday, January 5, 2020

best

bestWe all know maternity leave (and parental leave as a whole) in the US pales in comparison to the rest of the world. I usually scream when someone compares us to Swedens amazing government funded leave package, and I usually cry when that person tells me in the same sentence, that the USs lack of leave funding is on par with Papua New Guinea. Im nearly eight months pregnant with my second child - so my reactions are particularly visceral these days.That said, maternity leave in the US isnt a total horror show. On the state and city level, strides are being made. Im proud to be in New York where we introduced a parental leave package in January. (I wont be taking this package, but thats for another blog). San Francisco also has a leave law thats supplemental to the state package. And on top of state and city moves, were also seeing more of the private sector invest in parental leave to retain employees. Ive pasted a partial chart The New York Times ran that breaks down company le ave packages. The whole chart is here in an article that was written in response to Walmart and Starbucks extending their leave packages in January. A few PowerToFly partners are listed at the top of the chart, including Amazon (follow Amazon on PowerToFly to get updates on events, openings, more).Read the chart carefully because there are still discrepancies between salaried and hourly works. Also, despite positive news that shows massive corporations recognize they need to invest in parents, we need to still remember that only twelve percent of the private sector provides paid leave. Related Articles Around the Web Paid Maternity Leave 180 Companies Who Offer The Most Paid ... 50 Companies with Great Maternity Leave Paid Parental Leave 19 Companies and Industries With Radically Awesome Parental ... Aki Merced

Wednesday, January 1, 2020

David Wilkinson

David Wilkinson David Wilkinson David WilkinsonDavid Wilkinson (1771 1852) may not be a household name, but without his work the machine tool industry would not likely be what it is today.Learning in his fathers metal shops from an early age where Oziel Wilkinson, a successful blacksmith by trade, initially produced hand-cut screws and large iron nails, son David became a talented mechanic. In 1794, David Wilkinson designed a screw-cutting lathe with a slide rest that allowed the tool to work at a constant speed and guided the cutting tool properly so that it produced an accurate thread. Some believe his design welches based on 500-year-old drawings by Leonardo da Vinci, who left behind a collection of sketches of prototypes for machine tools long before they were ever built.Wilkinsons work with the screw-cutting lathe and other devices had significant implications for an emerging textile industry. An inscription at the National Historic Mechanical Engineering Landmark Wilkinson Mil l in Pawtucket, Rhode Island, calls him the father of the American machine tool industry. The Wilkinson Mill is now parte of a national landmark, the Slater Mill Historic Site, a museum complex designed to provide an understanding of the American Industrial Revolution.David Wilkinsons screw-cutting lathe, 1798 (from American Machinist).While the screw-cutting lathe, patented by Wilkinson in 1798, is what he is best-known for, other work during his lifetime provided advancements in other areas, including in steam power generation. Two years after designing the lathe, he built a steam engine and used it to propel a boat from near Providence to Pawtucket and back again, probably the first steamship in America.He also produced a large general purpose lathe in 1806 that became the foundation of the American tool industry and built some of the first power looms.Interestingly, it is believed that Wilkinson did not generate much income from his lathe, but an 1848 report from the Committee o n Military Affairs to the U.S. Senate called the invention vastly important to the government in its arsenals and armories and indispensable for making firearms.Wilkinson was born in Smithfield, Rhode Island, in 1771, the fourth of 10 children. In the 1780s, Oziel Wilkinson moved his family to Pawtucket and began making anchors for the emerging shipbuilding industry. The textile industry just in its infancy came to the Wilkinsons for their skills too. While Oziel made the iron work for a cotton carding machine, David forged and ground spindles for a spinning jenny. The grinding machine he built may have been the first centerless grinder, which offers benefits for certain types of grinding.The Wilkinson shop, powered by water from the Blackstone River, is one of the most important landmarks in the history of American mechanical engineering. There, screws made by the Wilkinsons were used in the manufacture of paper, in clothiers presses and in oil mills.When Samuel Slater, known as th e Father of the Industrial Revolution, became interested in building a textile spinning mill in Pawtucket in 1790, it was the Wilkinsons he turned to for the machinery for the mill, and when the Wilkinsons built their own mill in 1810, it was very near Slaters cotton mill. Slaters relationship with the Wilkinsons became much more than business when he married Davids sister Hannah.However, during a depression in the textile industry in 1829, Wilkinson was forced to sell his mill. The building was used by various industries until it was restored in the early 1970s and in 1977 was designated a National Historic Mechanical Engineering Landmark by ASME.David Wilkinson left Rhode Island and eventually died in 1852 in Caledonia Springs, Ontario.Nancy Giges is an independent writer.Wilkinsons work with the screw-cutting lathe and other devices had significant implications for an emerging textile industry.