Quantcast

Paid Sick Day Bill Meets Opposition At Hearing

51210sick.jpg Yesterday, the City Council unveiled a revised bill that would require private employers to offer paid sick days for employees, and business owners were not satisfied with the changes. "If the council considers paid sick days as a moral imperative on par with unemployment insurance or Social Security, where everyone pays into the system, then help our business community pay for it," Jack Friedman, executive director of the Queens Chamber of Commerce, told the Council. A heated debate ensued that made it clear the bill wouldn't be passed in its current form.

Most of the City Council, and unions such as Working Families Party, are backing the bill full-force. The bill had already been revised to meet business owners halfway, by defining "small businesses" as having fewer than 20 employees, rather than 10 or fewer. "Allowing staff to take time off when they're sick is a basic right and expectation. A sick employee resents being at work, is not thinking, is not performing their job duties, and depresses overall staff morale," Samira Rajan, CEO of the Brooklyn Cooperative Federal Credit Union, testified to the Council.

Business owners countered by proposing a system under which all employees would pay into a cooperative system to help companies afford the cost of the measure, and asked for the city to offer other tax breaks to businesses. "Ultimately, we know the bill will be passed. But we just want to ensure it is something we can live with," said Linda Baran, president and CEO of the Staten Island Chamber of Commerce (SIEDC), one of the opposing groups. Mayor Bloomberg hasn't spoken out publicly on the initiative, but gave an indication of his temperature by not sending any representative to yesterday's hearing, though it could be his representative called in sick that day.

Contact the author of this article or email tips@gothamist.com with further questions, comments or tips.

Comments [rss]

  • Alas, the profits of the downtrodden business owner may suffer as a result.

    Aren't all the tax incentives and loopholes enough for you already?

    These overlords know that they're in the driver's seat in this economy that they helped to create.

    Are you sick? Die already so that I can hire somebody at a lower rate...

  • BrooksofSheffield

    Idiots! You pay your employees when they are sick because you are a mensch. Not because the government makes you. It is a moral imperative. Why do bosses even need to be told this?

  • FelixtheCat & Christine Quinn'

    doesn't make sense for the employees to pay in toward the sick day pool because then human nature will dictate them to take those days off, regardless of their health, since they paid for it. Also Tax breaks? C'mon, stealing from Taxpayer A to pay Taxpayer B. We still end up screwed.

  • BDS=(Boycott.Divest.Sanction)

    it should surprise no one that

    that every developed country provides paid sick days for short- or long-term illnesses. 127 providing a week or more annually. One hundred and two countries guarantee one month or more of paid sick days!

    Nations that don’t guarantee paid sick leave, Lesotho, Liberia, Papua, New Guinea, Switzerland and yes,

    USA!

    don't worry though we're still number 1 in the developed world when it comes to wealth inequity. thats where all the money that would have gone to you take care of your bills when you're sick goes to rich folks, so that they can buy expensive art

    Picasso painting sells for a record $106.5M‎

    http://content.usatoday.com/communities/ondeadline/post/2010/05/picasso-painting-sells-for-a-record-1065m/1

blog comments powered by Disqus

send a tip

tips@gothamist.com