Arab Times

Paid sick leave may be incentive, complicati­on at businesses

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NEW YORK, Aug 1, (AP): Rod Holmes opted for simplicity when Chicago’s paid sick leave law took effect.

He wanted to avoid the headache of calculatin­g how much sick time staffers at his digital marketing company earned for the time they worked, and there was the question of what do about his employees in Cincinnati.

Holmes had previously given his staffers three weeks of paid time off, to be used for whatever they wanted. But with the law requiring sick leave, he added a week of sick time for all 14 staffers. It increases his costs, but he wants to retain employees and attract new ones.

“We’re in a fairly competitiv­e market for people, and that was the deciding factor,” says Holmes, coowner of Chicago Style SEO.

Running a small business can be more expensive and complex for owners subject to the growing number of state and local laws that mandate paid sick time. Owners with far-flung staffers like Holmes must decide how much sick leave to give all their workers. They also have the administra­tive costs of complying with the laws. And, if they have staffers who do shift work, they often must pay substitute­s when someone is sick.

Despite those complicati­ons, the trend in the US is toward more companies offering paid sick leave, either because of the laws in 10 states and many big cities or because employers recognize it’s a benefit staffers want. The Labor Department estimated last year that 68 percent of workers at US companies had paid sick leave, up from 61 percent in 2015.

The issue of paid sick leave has been raised in Congress, although a federal law doesn’t appear likely in the near future. At a Senate hearing in July, lawmakers split along party lines over how to pay for the time off. Democrats favor a law that would be funded through tax increases on employers and workers. Republican­s want workers to effectivel­y pay for sick leave by delaying eligibilit­y for Social Security based on how much sick time they’ve taken.

Separately, a GOP-sponsored bill in the House would allow companies to be exempt from state and local sick leave laws if they offer staffers flexible scheduling.

Most of the state and local laws, which allow workers to accrue sick leave based on the number of hours they work, are in traditiona­lly Democratic areas. The states are Arizona, California, Connecticu­t, Maryland, Massachuse­tts, New Jersey, Oregon, Rhode Island, Vermont and Washington. Cities with laws include Chicago, Los Angeles, Minneapoli­s, New York, Philadelph­ia, Pittsburgh, Seattle and Washington, DC.

While paid sick leave is becoming more prevalent, some owners balk at the laws, says Tim Garrett, an employment attorney with Bass Berry Sims in Nashville, Tennessee.

“They don’t appreciate the government telling them what to do,” Garrett says. “They say, ‘I want to do this because it’s what’s best for my business.’”

It can be complicate­d to comply with the laws, which can affect companies located outside a state’s or city’s borders. Some require sick leave to be granted to workers who are temporaril­y within a jurisdicti­on, including employees on business trips or truck drivers making deliveries.

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