Texarkana Gazette

Judge blocks Dallas ordinance requiring paid sick leave amid COVID-19 outbreak

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DALLAS — A federal judge has blocked the city of Dallas from enforcing an ordinance requiring private businesses to offer paid sick leave, but activists contend employees need those benefits more than ever as the coronaviru­s continues to spread.

District Judge Sean Jordan on Monday granted a preliminar­y injunction, ruling that a Texas statute prevents cities from enacting their own paid sick leave orders. The ordinance, approved by the city council in

April 2019, went into effect that August but wasn’t set to be enforced with penalties until April 1.

“Whether or not paid sick leave requiremen­ts should be imposed by government on private employers is an important public policy issue, made even more significan­t under the challengin­g circumstan­ces faced by our nation at this moment,” Jordan wrote.

The ordinance mandated that Dallas employers must grant one hour of paid sick leave for every 30 hours worked by a staffer.

Activists say the injunction leaves employees without paid sick leave benefits vulnerable at a time when it’s crucial for ailing workers stay home amid mounting efforts to fight COVID-19, the disease caused by the virus. Texas has more than 1,200 cases of coronaviru­s, according to a count kept by Johns Hopkins University. At least a dozen people have died.

Brianna Brown, deputy director of Texas Organizing Project, which lobbied for the ordinance, asserted in a statement that advocates won’t stop fighting to protect working families.

“As a pandemic shatters the health and financial stability of millions across the nation, this court ruling is particular­ly insidious and a slap in the face to the hundreds of thousands of workers who keep Dallas running,” Brown said.

Dallas currently has 300,000 employees without access to paid sick leave, according to estimates from the Institute for Women’s Policy Research.

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