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Psychology Professor Comments on Paid Family Leave in the Orlando Sentinel

Alice Davidson, a professor of psychology and executive director of the Hume House Child Development and Student Research Center at Rollins College weighed in on the benefits of family leave in this Orlando Sentinel article.

By Jo Marie Hebeler

June 02, 2026

photo of child's drawing of a family

According to a report from the Florida Policy Institute, approximately 76% of Florida workers lack access to paid family leave. Advocates argue that implementing a statewide mandate would significantly benefit the workforce, noting that the state currently loses $2.8 billion in annual wages from parents forced to leave their jobs due to a lack of leave options.

The article highlights the personal struggles of Florida mothers who faced severe physical and mental health challenges—including postpartum depression—after returning to work or managing newborn care without paid time off. While Florida passed a law in 2023 providing family leave for certain state employees, it has yet to mandate private-sector policies.

Proponents suggest a model funded by small employee and employer paycheck deductions to provide eight to 12 weeks of paid leave for both mothers and fathers. Experts emphasize that this time off is vital not just for maternal recovery, but for long-term paternal involvement and child development.

"The leave is not just about mom recovering postpartum. It’s about this investment in this long-term relationship, and individuals who are caring for this child developing that sense of love and emotional connection to that person," said Alice Davidson, psychology professor at Rollins College. "Research shows fathers who take paternity leave are more engaged parents long term."

Ultimately, advocates view paid leave as a politically popular, bipartisan economic investment that prevents families from facing impossible financial decisions during early parenthood.

Read the full article here.


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