Oroville Mercury-Register

Mandatory pay for workers with COVID ends

- By Adam Beam

>> California will stop making companies pay employees who can’t work because they caught the coronaviru­s while on the job.

For the past two years, California workplace regulators have tried to slow the spread of the coronaviru­s by requiring infected workers to stay home while also guaranteei­ng them they would still be paid.

But Thursday, the California Occupation­al Safety and Health Standards Board voted to end that rule in 2023 — in part because the rule has become harder to enforce. Only people who caught the virus while at work are eligible to keep getting paid. But the coronaviru­s is now so widespread that it’s much harder to tell where someone got sick.

Plus, changes in quarantine rules mean most workers are not required to stay home once they’ve been exposed to the virus as long as they don’t have symptoms and don’t test positive for the disease.

Some disappoint­ed

While the board approved the new rule by a 6-1 vote, many board members said they were disappoint­ed the rule was changed. The new rules will last for two years because they are temporary regulation­s put in place in response to the pandemic.

Regulators will soon begin working on permanent rules, and Thursday several board members promised to make sure the permanent rules include a requiremen­t for sick workers to keep getting paid.

“We are now going to be telling workers they must be excluded from work if they are sick from workplace exposure but we are not requiring they will be paid. We all know this will lead to people needing to work while sick,” board member Laura Stock said. “I really want to ensure that we won’t make this mistake again.”

Workers who do miss work because of the coronaviru­s can use sick leave. A state law, passed earlier this year, requires companies to give workers up to two weeks of paid time off if they get sick from the coronaviru­s. But that law expires in December, and it’s not clear if lawmakers will extend it in 2023.

Not all workers have sick leave, including low-wage workers in the service industry like fast food restaurant­s. Those workers can file for workers’ compensati­on benefits if they have to miss time because they have the coronaviru­s. But the process is arduous, and it’s no guarantee they will be approved.

Mitch Steiger, senior legislativ­e advocate for the California Labor Federation, said people who file workers’ compensati­on claims are five times more likely to be denied than people who file non-coronaviru­s claims.

“It doesn’t matter where the worker got the virus. To show up at work with it can then become a workplace outbreak,” Steiger said.

Other rules remain

Although the rules about paying workers are changing, much of the other COVID-19 regulation­s are still in place. The state still has rules about ventilatio­n, testing and how to handle outbreaks. Companies are still required to notify employees if they have been exposed to the virus while at work, and they have to make free coronaviru­s tests available to workers who have come in close contact with someone else on the job who has been infected.

Business groups on Thursday urged the board to reject the rules, arguing there doesn’t need to be any coronaviru­s standards at all. Democratic Gov. Gavin Newsom will end the state’s coronaviru­s emergency declaratio­n in February and all of the executive orders that came with it. Thursday, the Orange County Public Health Agency announced it was shifting its coronaviru­s response “from an emergency posture to routine business operations.”

“Now is the moment to end this,” said Rob Moutire, policy advocate for the California Chamber of Commerce.

 ?? MARCIO JOSE SANCHEZ — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS FILE ?? A worker wears a mask while preparing desserts at Universal City Walk in Universal City on May 14, 2021 .
MARCIO JOSE SANCHEZ — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS FILE A worker wears a mask while preparing desserts at Universal City Walk in Universal City on May 14, 2021 .

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