http://www.nytimes.com/2010/07/20/yo...ref=your-money
I heard a blurb about this on NPR this morning and nearly spit out my coffee. The NPR headline was that lenders are refusing mortgage loans to pregnant women because they may not return to work after the baby is born. I've been looking on line for the full story and found this article. The "may not return to work" statement is made but it seems to me that it's one lender's opinion (or probably more than one lender's opinion but the rest are not stupid enough to say that out loud). It really offended me -- felt like a slap in the face after I checked my e-mails and called in for messages during leave and flew 1500 miles with a 3-month old so I could be at work the minute my maternity leave ended. Also for women like GMW who are bringing their infants to work. I don't usually climb up on a soapbox but the concept of denying loans to pregnant women because the lender assumes she will not return to work is so outdated and unfair.
I heard a blurb about this on NPR this morning and nearly spit out my coffee. The NPR headline was that lenders are refusing mortgage loans to pregnant women because they may not return to work after the baby is born. I've been looking on line for the full story and found this article. The "may not return to work" statement is made but it seems to me that it's one lender's opinion (or probably more than one lender's opinion but the rest are not stupid enough to say that out loud). It really offended me -- felt like a slap in the face after I checked my e-mails and called in for messages during leave and flew 1500 miles with a 3-month old so I could be at work the minute my maternity leave ended. Also for women like GMW who are bringing their infants to work. I don't usually climb up on a soapbox but the concept of denying loans to pregnant women because the lender assumes she will not return to work is so outdated and unfair.
Comment