The VAS Communitypopular baby clothing company Kyte Baby is trying to head off a consumer boycott this morning, after the family of an employee said she was forced to give up her job to be in the hospital with her premature newborn.
Marissa Hughes took to social media Friday to thank supporters after they learned that she was out of a job at the clothing brand: "I just wanted to come on here and thank each and every person who has loved and supported us so much over these last few days," she said.
Hughes' family said she was fired after not returning from maternity leave in order to care for her newly-adopted son. He was premature, weighed 1 pound, and was in a Neonatal Intensive Care Unit (NICU) nine hours from their Dallas home.
According to Kyte Baby's policy, an employee like Hughes – who had been with the company for at least six months – is allowed two weeks of paid leave. But when that time was up, Hughes' request to work remotely from the NICU was denied.
When Hughes' story went viral, the online backlash against the company was swift.
Kyte Baby CEO Ying Liu posted not one, but two apology videos, after her first attempt was widely panned as insincere:
@kytebaby ♬ original sound - kytebaby
In her second TikTok video, Liu said of the first, "I basically just read it – it wasn't sincere … Sincerely, what went wrong was how we treated Marissa."
@kytebaby ♬ original sound - kytebaby
In that second apology, Liu went on to say Kyte Baby will continue to pay Hughes and offered her a position with the company, in addition to announcing policy changes they hope to enact by Feb. 1. Hughes declined the job offer.
Hughes' response, posted on Facebook: "We don't think it would be appropriate for me to go back."
CBS News reached out to Kyte Baby for additional comments, but has not yet heard back.
Nikki Battiste is a CBS News correspondent based in New York.
Twitter2025-05-04 05:19933 view
2025-05-04 04:50512 view
2025-05-04 03:54153 view
2025-05-04 03:252819 view
2025-05-04 03:242907 view
2025-05-04 03:04430 view
LOS ANGELES (AP) — A former Syrian military official who oversaw a prison where alleged human rights
Dr. Josie Tenore and Paul Hinds were introduced by a mutual friend in 2017 and hadn't been going out
Senators Draft Scaled-Back Climate Bill (Reuters) Sen. John Kerry and Sen. Joseph Lieberman have cra