USA TODAY US Edition

For 32M workers, it’s a case of health or wealth

1 in 4 jobs in America lacking paid sick leave

- Jessica Guynn and Kelly Tyko

Millions of American workers who don’t have paid sick leave could face an impossible choice if they suspect they are infected with coronaviru­s: their health or their livelihood.

Concerns are growing that workers who cannot afford to stay home will accelerate the spread of the virus, Vice President Mike Pence told reporters on Monday. The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention has recommende­d employers “ensure that your sick leave policies are flexible and consistent with public health guidance.”

Yet, even in this fast-moving crisis that has collapsed markets around the world, many still do without it. From home health care aides to restaurant employees, 1 in 4 U.S. workers – more than 32 million – don’t have paid sick days. According to the data from the Bureau of Labor Statistics, 7 in 10 lowwage workers do not receive paid sick leave. Some American workers don’t even have the option to take unpaid sick leave, forcing them to either clock in and risk the health of customers and coworkers or forfeit their paycheck and possibly their positions.

“I cannot afford to take a day off if I’m sick,” Maurilia Arellanes, a McDonald’s worker from San Jose, California, said through a translator.

Arellanes is one of the McDonald’s workers, part of the nationwide Fight for $15 group, who demanded Tuesday that the fast-food giant provide paid sick leave to all workers, including for the full length of any quarantine period if the employee or immediate family members show symptoms of a possible COVID-19 infection. If a McDonald’s restaurant has to close because of the coronaviru­s, the company should pay workers for missed shifts, they said.

“McDonald’s needs to step up and do everything it can to make sure workers like me are safe and that if we do get sick, we can take time off to get better without falling behind on our bills,” Arellanes said.

Urgent public health issue

Emergency paid sick leave has become an urgent public health issue with the rapid spread of the coronaviru­s, says Nicolas Ziebarth, associate professor of economics at Cornell University in the College of Human Ecology. The virus showed no signs of slowing Tuesday. Confirmed cases approached 800 across more than 30 states and the District of Columbia. The U.S. death toll rose to 27.

The studies Ziebarth has conducted show that mandated sick leave by individual states and cities significan­tly reduces transmissi­on of the flu. Other studies show that adopting paid sick leave does not depress wages or job creation, he said.

“When people gain access to paid sick leave, the spread of the flu decreases,” he says. “It’s important in this situation that when you have people who have symptoms and don’t feel well, that they do not go to work and spread diseases” to slow the infection rate and buy time for public health officials to develop a vaccine.

Darden Restaurant­s, which owns Olive Garden and LongHorn Steakhouse, said Monday that hourly employees would now be offered paid sick leave at a rate of one hour for every 30 hours worked.

The move reflects how quickly paid sick leave – one of the options President Donald Trump is weighing to shield vulnerable workers and the American economy from the coronaviru­s – has risen to the top of the national agenda.

Pence: Task force will support ‘hard-working Americans’

In a White House briefing on Monday, Pence said he had been hearing from governors about the worry that hourly wage earners would feel they had to go to work even if they were ill.

“The president has tasked this economic team, and is working already with leaders in the Congress, to make sure that anyone is not – feels that they’re at risk of losing their job or losing a paycheck because they may contract the coronaviru­s,” said Pence, who leads the administra­tion’s coronaviru­s task force. “When we tell people, ‘If you’re sick, stay home,’ the president has tasked the team with developing economic policies that will make it very, very clear that we’re going to stand by those hard-working Americans.”

House Speaker Nancy Pelosi, Senate Minority Leader Chuck Schumer and other top congressio­nal Democrats on Sunday urged Trump to take steps to protect workers, including paid sick leave for those being quarantine­d or caring for children kept home by school closures.

Sen. Patty Murray, D-Wash., and Rep. Rosa DeLauro, D-Conn., proposed legislatio­n last week that would require all employers to give workers 14 days of paid sick leave during a public health emergency, including the current threat.

“In the richest country in the history of the world, it is an outrage that we do not guarantee paid leave for everyone,” Sen. Bernie Sanders said via Twitter on Saturday. “We cannot let the greed of corporatio­ns risk the public health of our community.”

Federal law does not require employers to offer paid sick leave, though 12 states and Washington, D.C., do require it as well as some 30 cities and local jurisdicti­ons. Nevada’s paid sick leave law took effect at the start of this year.

Maine’s takes effect in 2021, according to the National Conference of State Legislatur­es.

Typically, these mandates require that employees earn a minimum number of paid sick hours or days each year. Paid sick leave is often opposed by business groups and many states have passed legislatio­n to thwart any effort to force employers to offer it.

Amazon, Apple, Uber, other companies react to outbreak

The coronaviru­s, or COVID-19, has brought new urgency to the question of whether all workers should have paid sick leave.

King County in Washington state, hardest hit by the coronaviru­s, has recommende­d residents work from home. Profession­al workers at major corporatio­ns from Amazon to Google have been given the green light to work remotely. That self-quarantini­ng, aided by tools such as videoconfe­rencing and group messaging, means they are at far lower risk of getting sick.

Some companies including Microsoft and Amazon have pledged to continue to pay hourly service workers – such as kitchen staff, janitors and shuttle drivers – even if their hours are reduced.

 ?? TED SHAFFREY/AP ?? Porter Raul Rodriguez disinfects a railing at the New York Stock Exchange on Monday amid coronaviru­s fears. About 32 million U.S. workers have no paid sick days. Concerns are growing that workers who cannot afford to stay home will accelerate the spread of the virus, Vice President Mike Pence told reporters.
TED SHAFFREY/AP Porter Raul Rodriguez disinfects a railing at the New York Stock Exchange on Monday amid coronaviru­s fears. About 32 million U.S. workers have no paid sick days. Concerns are growing that workers who cannot afford to stay home will accelerate the spread of the virus, Vice President Mike Pence told reporters.

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