Generous parental leave is a recruitment tool — and a trap

NEW YORK, UNITED STATES — A California class action filed in April against Deloitte Consulting alleges the firm penalized employees who took parental leave by holding them to the same performance benchmarks as peers who worked a full year — cutting bonuses and suppressing pay for years afterward, Fast Company reports.
Generous leave attracts talent, appraisal systems punish it
Joan Williams, a professor at UC Law San Francisco and founding director of the Equality Action Center, said discrimination against leave-takers typically evades detection because companies find a “legitimate business reason” for the decision.
The lawsuit, Barela v. Deloitte Consulting LLP, centers on that exact mechanism: annual performance scores tied directly to salary increases and bonuses, with no adjustment for months spent on protected leave.
The lead plaintiff — a former senior manager in Deloitte’s Los Angeles human capital consulting practice — received lower ratings in the years she took parental and pregnancy-related leave, then was terminated in December 2025 in a reduction in force. She alleges the discriminatory ratings affected her pay, bonuses, and promotion prospects across five years.
The gap between leave policy and performance practice
Williams said the pattern is becoming more common and harder to trace. Workers who return from parental leave can find themselves facing a negative performance evaluation or targeted in a reduction in force that “doesn’t make business sense to them.”
Deloitte and Zoom both cut parental leave benefits in early 2026, even as the benefit remains one of the top recruitment tools cited by employers.
The lawsuit alleges violations of the Family and Medical Leave Act, the Pregnant Workers Fairness Act, and Title VII sex discrimination — noting women are overrepresented among pregnancy-related and parental leave users.
The cumulative effect is structural: lower ratings reduce bonuses and base pay, and because raises build on existing compensation levels, each penalized absence compounds the career damage.
The Deloitte lawsuit frames a tension that extends directly into BPO sourcing decisions. As U.S. companies face legal exposure for leave-based discrimination, they will increasingly scrutinize whether their outsourcing partners apply comparable performance frameworks to offshore staff who take parental leave.
Providers who can demonstrate leave-neutralized performance systems — where protected absences do not compound into suppressed pay and blocked promotions — carry a material differentiator in enterprise procurement, as clients facing litigation work to clean up the same pattern across their supply chains.

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