NYAPRS Note: Several states are moving in the direction of offering mandatory paid sick time for workers that don’t receive the benefit as a salaried employee. NY is considering this at the MRT Social Determinants of Health Table, particularly considering its impact on persons with disabilities and caregivers of persons with disabilities. Paid sick time means more consistent employment for low wage and disabled workers, and helps to maintain food and housing security and keep people in the community rather than hospitals, shelters, and the criminal justice system. We may see a legislative bid in NY this year, but there’s currently little idea of where the legislature’s sentiment or political will would move on this issue.
Califronia Law Bolsters National Effort to Give Workers Paid Sick Time
Kasiser Health News; Michelle Andrews, 10/3/2014
With federal legislation continuing to prove elusive, California in September joined a growing number of states and cities that require employers to provide paid sick time off for their workers.
The California law, the Healthy Workplaces, Healthy Families Act of 2014, requires large and small employers to provide at least three days paid sick leave annually to employees who work 30 or more days a year. The leave would be available if they or a family member becomes ill. When it takes effect in July, it’s expected to affect 6.5 million workers.
Other locations that require paid sick leave include Connecticut as well as San Francisco, Washington, D.C., Seattle, New York City, Portland, Ore., and Newark, N.J., according to the National Partnership for Women and Families.
In addition, voters in Massachusetts, Montclair and Trenton, N.J., and Oakland, Calif., will consider ballot measures this fall requiring paid sick leave, says Vicki Shabo, a vice president at the National Partnership.
“We’re the only economically developed country in the world that doesn’t have paid sick days,” she says.
Nearly 4 in 10 private sector workers lack paid sick leave, and low-wage workers make up a disproportionate share. According to the Bureau of Labor Statistics’ 2014 National Compensation Survey, only 30 percent of the workers whose earnings are in the bottom quarter nationally had access to paid sick time compared with 84 percent of workers in the highest quartile.
The problem hits women especially hard. Women make up two-thirds of low-wage workers and are more likely to be the family caregivers, says Liz Watson, senior counsel at the National Women’s Law Center and director of its Workplace Justice for Women.
“Their ability to take paid sick leave or paid medical leave is crucial to being able to hold onto their jobs,” Watson says.
Federal legislation that would require paid sick leave has been introduced several times but never passed. The Healthy Families Act, introduced by Rep. Rosa Delauro, D-Conn., in 2013, would allow workers at companies with at least 15 employees to accrue up to seven days paid sick leave annually.
Noting that it took many attempts to pass the Family and Medical Leave Act, which allows workers up to 12 weeks of unpaid leave to care for their own or a family member’s medical needs, Watson says, “I think we will see.”