Media releases

  • Need a ‘pawternity’ leave? Brock expert available to discuss how pets impact work-life balance

    MEDIA RELEASE: 6 April 2018 – R00071

    Anyone who has introduced a new pet into their household knows how much attention and training it takes to fully integrate it into the family.

    The amount of time it takes to care for a new pet is prompting some employees to take ‘pawternity leave’ from work to fully dedicate their time to getting their pet settled.

    A human resources professor from Brock University’s Goodman School of Business says that pet ownership can dramatically impact a family’s dynamic and, ultimately, employees’ productivity and work-life balance.

    Ahead of National Pet Day, which is observed on Wednesday, April 11, Deborah McPhee, Associate Professor of Human Resources Management, discusses how some employers are adapting to trends by allowing employees to bring their pets to work and even take time off when welcoming a new pet.

    In an article published earlier this year in The Conversation Canada, McPhee discussed changing family dynamics that place a greater emphasis on pets. People are staying single longer and owning pets instead of having kids, causing a change in the profile of the average family.

    More families than ever own pets, which can pose challenges for work-life balance as people are forced to find options for pet care while they are at work.

    While some employers allow pets at the workplace, it can cause productivity-reducing conflict between people who view their pets as stress-relievers and those who experience stress by working alongside pets they’re not comfortable with.

    McPhee says she expects pets will become more integrated into workplaces as employers work to attract millennials who have a growing fondness for their ‘fur babies.’

    McPhee is available to speak to the media about:

    • How families with pets are managing work-life balance.
    • How pet ownership is changing family dynamics.
    • Why businesses are competing for talent by offering pet-related perks, including allowing pets at the office.
    • The concept of ‘pawternity leave’ that allows employees to take time off work after introducing a new pet to their household.
    • How to resolve conflict arising from pet-friendly workplaces.

    NOTE: McPhee and her Goodman School of Business colleague Robert Steinbauer, Assistant Professor of Business Ethics, are currently conducting research on organizations with pet-friendly policies, and learning how it can impact workplace productivity. Any organizations or individuals interested in participating in this research should contact them at dmcphee@brocku.ca or rsteinbauer@brocku.ca.

    For more information or for assistance arranging interviews:

    * Dan Dakin, Media Relations Officer, Brock University ddakin@brocku.ca, 905-688-5550 x5353 or 905-347-1970

    Brock University Marketing and Communications has a full-service studio where we can provide high definition video and broadcast-quality audio.

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    Categories: Media releases

  • Tourism event at Brock brings together students, researchers and industry

    MEDIA RELEASE: 5 April 2018 – R00070

    As Niagara prepares to welcome the bulk of its 14 million visitors over the coming months, Brock University’s Department of Geography and Tourism Studies is preparing to host its first Tourism Networking Event for students and the industry.

    The networking event will be held from 6 to 8:30 p.m. on Tuesday, April 10, when 20 industry sponsors, more than 50 students as well as Brock faculty and staff, will get together to discuss employment and research opportunities within the tourism industry, and identify local experiential education potential.

    The evening will feature roundtable networking, vendor booths and a presentation by Becky White, a graduate of the Tourism and Environment program at Brock, who now works at Niagara Falls Tourism. Students will also have the opportunity to chat with industry experts and get professional portraits taken for their LinkedIn profiles.

    “The Tourism Networking Event will provide students with an opportunity to learn more about potential careers in the tourism industry and make important contacts that can help them to find internship or co-op placements this summer or sometime later in their studies,” says Christopher Fullerton, Associate Professor and Chair of the Department of Geography and Tourism Studies.

    Fullerton said the event will also help industry partners “learn more about the high-quality education that our students receive, the important tourism research that our faculty members conduct and the many different ways they can work with our Department and Brock in general.”

    The Department of Geography merged with Tourism and Environment Studies in 2016 and offers programs in Tourism Management, Tourism and Environment, as well as Human Geography and Physical Geography.

    Industry guests at the Tourism Networking Event include representatives from the City of St. Catharines’ Tourism Services, the Tourism Industry Association of Ontario, Venture Niagara, Destination Ontario Travel Information Centres and several Niagara-based tourism businesses.

    What: Tourism Networking Event

    Who: Department of Geography and Tourism Studies along with industry partners

    When: Tuesday, April 10 from 6 to 8:30 p.m.

    Where: Pond Inlet, Mackenzie Chown J-Block, Brock University

    Media are invited to attend the event. Interviews can be arranged with Christopher Fullerton, Associate Professor and Chair of the Department of Geography and Tourism Studies, as well as with Brock students and industry partners.

    For more information or for assistance arranging interviews:

    * Dan Dakin, Media Relations Officer, Brock University ddakin@brocku.ca, 905-688-5550 x5353 or 905-347-1970

    Brock University Marketing and Communications has a full-service studio where we can provide high definition video and broadcast-quality audio.

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    Categories: Media releases