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Let's Imagine Podcast EPISODE 39: Workplaces Were Not Built for Mothers (with Allison Venditti)

Let's Imagine Podcast EPISODE 39: Workplaces Were Not Built for Mothers (with Allison Venditti)

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Workplaces Were Not Built for Mothers (with Allison Venditti)

 

 

Headshot of Allison Venditti. EPISODE 39: Workplaces Were Not Built for MothersAs International Women’s Day approaches, we’re invited not only to celebrate progress, but to confront the systems that still shape inequality in the world of work. One of the clearest examples is the experience of mothers in the workplace - a reality nearly every organization assumes it understands, yet few have truly designed for.

For decades, workplace structures were built around outdated assumptions: that caregiving would happen quietly, outside the workday, and without disrupting professional life. While change has come, many of those foundations remain. Mothers continue to face discrimination, stalled advancement, pay gaps, and workplace cultures that treat caregiving as a complication rather than a contribution. In Canada’s nonprofit sector - where 77% of workers are women - these challenges are especially urgent.

In this episode of Let’s Imagine, host Bruce MacDonald is joined by Allison Venditti, Founder and CEO of Moms at Work, Canada’s largest community for working mothers and a leading voice on pay equity, caregiving, and workplace transformation. Allison is a Certified HR Leader, pay transparency expert, and a driving force behind national policy shifts aimed at creating more equitable workplaces.

Together, Bruce and Allison explore the “motherhood penalty,” (and subsequently, the “fatherhood bonus”), the persistent disconnect between workplace policies and real caregiving needs, and what it means to build leadership models grounded in trust, autonomy, and care. They discuss how nonprofits can take meaningful action on pay transparency, redesign pathways to leadership for mothers, and move beyond performative flexibility toward structural change and accountability.

Make sure to check out our full episode list. This episode is also available on Apple Podcasts, Spotify, and YouTube.

This podcast was made possible thanks to generous support from our sponsors.

 

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Pictured: Albert Labelle (Partner, PearTree Canada), Jemima Adejo (Development and Grants Manager, CEE Centre for Young Black Professionals), Billy Morin (MP for Edmonton Northwest), Jodene Baker (Vice President, Research, Advocacy & External Relations, Imagine Canada), Sarah Kim (Senior Manager, Advocacy & Engagement, Vancouver Foundation)
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