USA TODAY International Edition

Inequities roil access to paid leave

People of color facing hurdles, report says

- Charisse Jones

When her husband became ill nearly two decades ago, Tameka Henry often had to take off a week or more every month to care for him and their children. That meant losing hundreds of dollars in income needed to buy groceries and pay bills because her jobs caring for people with disabiliti­es didn’t offer paid leave.

In December, when she and her daughter contracted COVID- 19, Henry once again had to go without pay as she recuperate­d at home. Now, though she is still dealing with the fatigue and other lingering effects of the virus, Henry goes to work anyway.

“I needed it before the pandemic,” Henry, 43, says about the ability to take time off with pay. “Now that it’s a pandemic, it’s even more clear we really need it. ... It’s tough having to choose between your life and your livelihood.”

People of color, who are more likely to die and lose their jobs during the pandemic, also are less likely to have access to paid leave. That benefit would enable them to take time off to care for themselves and their families during the pandemic, a new report found.

Among workers, 50% of Latinos and 37% of African Americans say their employers did not offer time off with pay, compared with 34% of white employees, according to the report from the National Partnershi­p for Women & Families, citing pre- pandemic data from the U. S. Bureau of Labor Statistics.

“Women and people of color are forced to make the impossible choice between caring for themselves or a loved one, or a paycheck,” says Erika Moritsugu, vice president of government relations and economic justice for the NPWF.

Clara Vasquez says that in her last job as a home health aide, she would cobble together hours a month at a time to take care of her and her family’s needs.

By the end of the year, if she never took a day off, she’d have about a week of personal time – nowhere near enough to care for and supervise her 7year- old son when his school was shuttered because of the coronaviru­s crisis.

She recently took a new position at a pre- school in Granger, Washington, that gives her the paid leave she needs to deal with the unique challenges sparked by the health crisis.

“I could be with my family,” Vasquez

says, “and still get some money to pay bills and buy groceries.”

No national paid leave

The U. S. is one of the few nations in the world to not have a national paid leave policy. With the decision to provide that benefit largely left to employers, nearly 80% of private- sector workers do not have paid family leave through their jobs to care for a new child or other loved one.

The consequenc­es of that gap are more critical for Black, Latino, Asian and Indigenous workers, who tend to earn lower wages and experience higher rates of unemployme­nt as well as to be out of work for longer periods of time.

“The workers who are paid the least and have the least savings and ... other assets to fall back on are often the same workers in these jobs where employers aren’t stepping up to provide basic benefits like paid leave,” says Jessica Mason, senior policy analyst with the NPWF and one of the report’s authors.

During the COVID- 19 pandemic, women of color have disproport­ionately worked in jobs that put them at risk of contractin­g the virus.

“At the same time, they are more likely to have caregiving needs at home,” Mason says. That “places those women in the incredibly difficult position of deciding whether to be there for the family ... or at the job that puts food on the table.”

A survey cited in the report that was

taken from September to October and co- sponsored by the National Employment Law Project, found that 28% of Latinas had taken days off without pay or quit a job to take care of a child or elderly relative. That was compared with 27% of Black women, 12% of white women and 12% of men.

“We’ve seen much higher rates of housing insecurity with people unable to make rent or mortgage payments, and food insecurity,” Mason says. “All of those hardships are falling much more heavily on communitie­s of color.”

Even when employers do have paid leave policies, the decision to grant time off often varies according to who is asking for it, the report found. Among Black employees who participat­ed in the survey taken last fall, nearly 3 in 10 said their requests have been turned down, compared with 9% of white workers.

“Their employer can prevent them from taking it, or retaliate,” Mason says. “In the middle of a pandemic … those are disparitie­s putting the health and wellbeing of workers of color at risk.”

Shutting out people of color

The Federal Family and Medical Leave Act offers job protection to workers who take unpaid leave. But it applies to only roughly 50% of workers, and its rigid guidelines often leave out many employees of color, according to the NPWF.

For instance, the law applies only to workplaces with at least 50 employees, and workers must have been on the payroll for at least a year and have worked at least 1,250 hours to qualify.

Women in general, women of color, and Black and Latino men are more like

ly to be given part- time shifts even if they ask for full- time hours, according to the report. And it’s particular­ly hard for Black and Latino workers to have longevity on the job when they tend to be laid off first during recessions and have more difficulty finding work because of bias, the NPWF says.

“When you take all of those things together, it disproport­ionately excludes Latinx, Asian American and Native American and Black workers,” Mason says. Latinx is a gender- neutral term preferred by some Hispanics.

Native American, Pacific Islander and multiracia­l employees are 100% more likely than their white peers to be unable to take time off when they need to, according to the NPWF report. Black employees are 83% more likely and Latino workers are 66% more likely than whites to face the same dilemma.

The primary reason is that they cannot afford to take time off without pay. Fear of being fired is also a key concern, the report’s researcher­s say.

Lost pay and jobs

Henry, who lives in Las Vegas, says she lost a series of jobs when employers grew frustrated with her needing to take off to care for her family. And the wages she lost when she had to stay home sometimes meant trips to food pantries and making special payment arrangemen­ts to handle bills.

In her current job working for a small nonprofit, Henry says she has an understand­ing boss and she doesn’t worry about losing her job. But Henry still doesn’t have paid leave. She lost roughly a month’s worth of wages when she and her daughter caught COVID- 19.

She’s already used up all the sick days she had for this year as she copes with COVID- 19’ s side effects.

“There are some days where I’ll make it here to work and ... you are just so fatigued,” Henry says. “But you have to sit here and try to make it through because you need to be able to take care of your family.”

Road to paid leave

Nine states and Washington D. C., have passed bills providing paid family and medical leave, and several more states have pending legislatio­n, but a national policy would be the best way to help erase inequities, advocates say.

“We’re all sitting on top of ... a history of slavery, of inequitabl­e immigratio­n patterns, of colonizati­on,” Mason says. “All these things over time have shaped our labor market in really important ways ... Leaving it up to individual employers to try to right those historical wrongs and somehow individual­ly cobble together this critical safety net for employees has never worked, and it’s especially not working now.’’

Statewide policies have provided a national model. This year, nearly 200 members of Congress introduced The Family Act, a bill co- sponsored by Rep. Rosa DeLauro, D- Conn., and Sen. Kirsten Gillibrand, D- N. Y., that would create a national paid family and medical leave program, Moritsugu says.

It’s a policy Vasquez hopes to see. “We are all essential workers no matter what job we do,” she says. “And this will help all the families in the country who are struggling ( so they) do not have to decide whether to go to work or to choose family.’’

 ??  ?? Tameka Henry has lost income and jobs because of taking time off to care for her family. Her jobs have not offered paid leave.
Tameka Henry has lost income and jobs because of taking time off to care for her family. Her jobs have not offered paid leave.

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