On
October 21, the Center for American Progress hosted an event co-sponsored by
Half in Ten and the National Partnership for Woman & Families focused on
expanding paid sick days coverage.
The Future of Children's Work and Family
volume, which was distributed to attendees at the event, recommends that a
minimal amount of paid sick leave be provided to workers. The status quo,
whereby the lowest-paid workers are least likely to have paid sick leave or
other leave that enables them to take care of family responsibilities, forces
working parents to choose between not taking care of their family or losing
their wages (or losing their job altogether).
This
past spring, Connecticut passed S.B. 913, the Paid Sick Leave bill, which made
the state the country's first to pass a law requiring paid sick days for
service employees. Although many salaried workers have paid sick days in their
contract, the same does not apply to 80 percent of low-wage workers in
Connecticut.
"This
discussion is about hourly workers at the lower end of the scale who are the
most vulnerable," said Connecticut Governor Dan Malloy.
Panelists
argued that the law promotes increases in health, cuts business costs by
reducing risks associated with employees coming to work while sick, garners
bi-partisan support, and is not abused by employees.
For
more information on the event at the Center for American Progress go to:
http://www.americanprogress.org/events/2011/10/paidsickdays.html
To
read the Future
of Children's Work and Family volume and policy brief go
to:
www.futureofchildren.org
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