Sun.Star Cebu

Caring for ‘chosen family’ gains ground in sick-leave laws

-

Yee Won Chong had just been diagnosed with cancer. His relatives were half a world away in Malaysia and couldn’t care for him. So he turned to the friends he considers his “chosen family.”

“There was no question,” says his longtime housemate Brooks Nelson, a Portland, Oregon, charity executive who used his own sick days to accompany Chong to doctor’s appointmen­ts. “That’s what family does.”

Arrangemen­ts like theirs have quietly been gaining political recognitio­n.

In the last two years, Arizona, Rhode Island and the three biggest U.S. cities—New York, Los Angeles and Chicago—have passed laws that let workers use sick days to care for anyone who’s like family to them. Similar laws also passed in Austin, Texas, just last month and St. Paul, Minnesota, in 2016. Millions of federal employees and contractor­s also have the benefit. To some business interests, such laws put bosses in the awkward position of figuring out who’s the “equivalent” of family. But to Chong, the policies simply “catch up with the ways people are related to each other.”

At 46, the nonprofit-organizati­on consultant has had romantic partners but also forged bonds with people in homes he has shared and in his circle of liberal activists.

Still, as he asked for help dealing with cancer, he wondered: “Am I imposing on them?” His friends didn’t see it that way.

Roberta Hunte readily kept Chong company at chemothera­py, recalling her friends’ support when her mother had cancer. Andrei Joseph, who flew in to help Chong recuperate from surgery, is a cancer survivor and part of a couple whose home Chong shared for years in Brookline, Massachuse­tts.

“What kind of person would I be if I didn’t go in his time of need?” says Joseph, a retired teacher.

Acknowledg­ing the “equivalent” of family relationsh­ips is rooted in a 1969 regulation about federal employees’ leave for military funerals in the thick of the Vietnam War.

A 1994 law extended the “equivalent” definition to federal workers’ sick time, and a 2015 presidenti­al order did the same for many federal contractor­s. The more recent state and local measures cover an estimated 10 million private-sector and government workers, says Wendy ChunHoon of Family Values at Work, a paid sick leave advocacy group.

Workers don’t get extra sick days for family-“equivalent” care; it’s just a way they can use their allotted time. It’s not yet clear whether the broad definition spurs workers to take more of their sick days.

Much of the impetus for chosen-family-friendly sick leave laws has come from gay people. But New York City got complaints about workers being denied sick leave to care for aunts and a fiancée before its law was broadened last fall, consumer affairs Commission­er Lorelei Salas said.

Regardless of laws, some employers let employees use sick or “personal” days to care for whomever they choose. “I don’t need to know or research or see a birth certificat­e, a wedding certificat­e. We’re dealing with adults,” says Jim Houser, co-owner of Hawthorne Auto Clinic in Portland.

But some business groups and employment lawyers are wary of managing sick time around the “equivalent” of family.

“This open-ended provision, which defies any definition or parameters, is priceless” to sicktime slackers, says Michael Soltis, a Connecticu­t lawyer who tracks paid sick leave laws. Lisa Horn of the Society for Human Resource Management, a major associatio­n of HR profession­als, says the language “raises a host of concerns” about its meaning.

Others see better ways to be inclusive. “Who gets to decide who’s the ‘equivalent of family?’” asks Richard V. Reeves, a senior fellow in economics at the Brookings Institutio­n think tank. He suggests simply letting workers use sick time to care for themselves or “another.” / AP

 ?? 680NEWS FOTO ??
680NEWS FOTO

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Philippines