HARTFORD, Conn.(AP)
For school bus driver Jamille Aine, a cold is more than an
inconvenience. His employer does not offer paid sick days, so if he
can't shake the bug, he may not be able to pay his bills.
Some 46 million U.S. workers lack paid sick days, but lawmakers
in 12 states _ including California, Connecticut, Minnesota and
West Virginia _ have proposed legislation in the past year that
would require businesses to provide them.
Dale Butland of Ohioans for Healthy Families, an advocacy group
pushing a November ballot initiative that would require employers
to offer paid sick days, said the effort picked up steam in
Columbus and other state capitals because federal legislation has
stalled.
"This is the next frontier in assuring workplaces are
safe," said Kate Kahan, director of the work and family
program at the Washington-based National Partnership for Women
& Families, which lobbies on paid sick leave and other
workplace and health care issues.
Businesses _ especially small companies _ argue that forcing
them to offer paid sick days hinders their ability to provide a
flexible array of benefits, such as a mix of vacation and personal
days that also may be used by employees when they are sick. And
they say it's a costly new mandate for businesses already
struggling through a contracting economy.
Nearly all large companies already offer paid sick leave to at
least some of their workers, but state and federal mandates could
require them to expand the benefit.
Kahan and other workers' advocates believe paid sick time
should be an employment standard, like the federal minimum
wage.
Advocates say the benefit is particularly needed for employees
who handle food or work with children.
Aine, who drives Stamford students ages of 3 to 17 to school,
cited that as a reason he would like to have the financial
flexibility to stay home when he's sick.
"It's not just for me, but for the people you
drive," he said.
The federal Bureau of Labor Statistics estimates that 43 percent
of the private industry labor force worked in 2007 without paid
sick time, a group primarily made up of low-paid employees at small
businesses.
Workers advocates' have been pushing the issue since 1993,
when the Family and Medical Leave Act was signed into law,
requiring employers to provide up to 12 weeks of unpaid leave a
year. While federal legislation was first proposed in 2004, it may
have a shot at passing next year if Democrats control the White
House and Congress after the November elections, said the
bill's sponsor, Rep. Rosa DeLauro, D-Conn.
Wal-Mart Stores Inc., the world's largest retailer, gives
paid sick days to employees who work more than 34 hours a week. The
company has not taken a position on the proposed federal law,
spokeswoman E.R. Anderson said.
"We feel our health benefits and sick leave benefits are
competitive, and we feel good about it," she said.
Karen Kerrigan, president of the Small Business and
Entrepreneurship Council, an Oakton, Va.-based lobbying group with
70,000 members nationwide, said the costs of providing paid sick
days are particularly difficult for her constituents. The new
requirement would add to already high taxes and costly workers'
compensation, she said.
"This is a piling-on measure," she said.
Most jobs that offer paid sick time have higher salaries and
attract educated, skilled workers. About 80 percent of
management-level workers have paid sick time, while 39 percent of
service workers get the benefit, the U.S. Department of Labor
says.
"Very often these are the jobs where people are living very
close to the bone," said Debra Ness, president of the National
Partnership for Women & Families. "Workers are sometimes
putting their jobs on the line because they have a sick child or
are sick."
"If we live in a society where all adults are working then
we need to have a workplace to accommodate that reality," she
said.
Paid sick days are already law in Washington, D.C., where
employees earn days off based on the number of hours worked and the
size of the business, and in San Francisco, which requires one hour
sick leave for every 30 hours worked.
The Golden Gate Restaurant Association, which represents 900
restaurants, did not endorse or oppose the ballot measure that
enacted the local ordinance, but won several changes, such as
allowing employers to require a worker give "reasonable
notice" when calling in sick, said Kevin Westlye, executive
director. The law has been successful, he said.
"There's been some concern that employees are abusing
the ordinance. There's been a little bit of that, but not as
widespread as people thought at the beginning," Westlye
said.
Proposed federal legislation would provide workers with seven
days of paid sick leave a year for employees who work 30 or more
hours a week. The benefit would be prorated for part-time
workers.
Sen. Barack Obama, the presumptive Democratic presidential
nominee, supports the legislation.
Sen. John McCain, the presumptive Republican nominee, opposes
employer mandates, particularly when the economy is slowing, his
campaign said. It did not address the pending federal
legislation.
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