Baltimore Sun

Calif. workplaces extend pandemic pay through Sept.

- By Don Thompson

SACRAMENTO, Calif. — California workplace regulators have extended mandatory pay for workers affected by the coronaviru­s through the end of 2022, acting more than two months after state lawmakers restored similar benefits through September.

The decision announced Thursday again pitted management against labor as the Occupation­al Safety and Health Standards Board renewed revised workplace safety rules that would otherwise have expired in early May.

“I don’t think we’re done with this yet,” board chairman David Thomas said of the pandemic.

“There’s going to be a surge in a week or so,” Thomas added. “This is the best protection we have.”

Laura Stock, an occupation­al safety representa­tive on the board, echoed employee advocates who lobbied board members to continue special protection­s for workers even as health officials ease mask, quarantine and other requiremen­ts for the general public.

Unlike members of the public who can choose their own risk tolerance, Stock said, “people who are in the workplace have no choice but to be there.”

Management representa­tive Kate Crawford said the rules have caused confusion as she cast the only “no” in a 6-1 vote.

Keeping what is known as “exclusion pay” for workers who are sent home due to the coronaviru­s is both costly and confusing, particular­ly since the Legislatur­e recently approved COVID-19 sick leave, said Rob Moutrie, a policy advocate with the California Chamber of Commerce.

Small businesses have particular­ly struggled with the obligation, Moutrie said.

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