Lake County Record-Bee

WILL COVID SICK LEAVE RETURN TO CALIFORNIA?

- By Sameea Kamal CalMatters

Gov. Gavin Newsom, Assembly Speaker Anthony Rendon and state Senate leader Toni Atkins announced a deal to require businesses to provide as much as two weeks of COVID-19 paid sick leave. It would be retroactiv­e to Jan. 1 and extend until Sept. 30.

Labor unions and their Democratic allies in the Legislatur­e want to bring back extra paid sick leave for COVID-19. Gov. Gavin Newsom is also proposing to revive supplement­al leave in his budget.

But as with so much else in the pandemic, it’s not a simple propositio­n.

There’s opposition from powerful business groups. And key details of the leave still must be worked out, including whether companies would get any help to offset their costs.

Negotiatio­ns are ongoing among key lawmakers and the Newsom administra­tion, with the goal of an agreement in the next several weeks — well before approval of the full budget in June.

The California Labor Federation said it’s pushing for quick action — ideally in weeks, not months. And while the omicron wave might start to decline by then, the group wants employees protected in the event of future surges as well.

The federation wants a one-year extension of the additional leave, which would be three months longer than it was in effect in 2021 — though it’d be willing to settle for a leave that at least stretches into the fall.

Under the state law in effect from last March until Newsom and the Legislatur­e let it expire Sept. 30, any employer with more than 25 workers was required to offer as much as 80 hours of leave for quarantine­s or vaccine side effects. Employees received as much as $511 a day, or a maximum of $5,110 total, with hours accrued retroactiv­e to Jan. 1, 2021.

Last year, the supplement­al leave — on top of the minimum three days of paid sick leave a year that all employees get — was funded by a federal tax credit equal to a worker’s paid time off, including any health care costs. That credit also expired Sept. 30. The state law didn’t contain a provision to reimburse businesses — and it’s not in Newsom’s proposed budget, or in his emergency $1.4 billion request for COVID response.

Ashley Hoffman, a policy advocate at the California Chamber of Commerce, said her group continues to have concerns about the costs to business — and raised the argument that paid sick leave encourages workers not to get vaccinated.

“Businesses are already doing a lot to help fight the pandemic. There’s been a lot of mandates through Cal/OSHA,” she told CalMatters. “There’s this general issue of: How much does the business community have to continue to subsidize those workers who are choosing to continue to be unvaccinat­ed? That seems to cut against the state’s message to get vaccinated.”

The governor’s office said it would not comment on that argument, or whether any aid for businesses is under considerat­ion.

“We’re working with the Legislatur­e to craft a policy that meets the needs of 2022 — which are different than 2021’s, given new and revised informatio­n about science and vaccines,” said H.D. Palmer, spokespers­on for Newsom’s finance department.

In voicing his support for renewing the leave, Assembly Speaker Anthony Rendon suggested he would be open to aiding some employers. “In the absence of new federal funding to assist small businesses with COVID sick leave requiremen­ts, I support augmenting the Governor’s budget to add state funding for this purpose, and we have already had a productive discussion on this,” Rendon said in a statement.

In 2022, the omicron surge — with California now reporting nearly 110,000 coronaviru­s cases a day — is causing staffing shortages in health care and other essential workplaces.

Federal guidelines, endorsed by state health officials, recommend that anyone, regardless of vaccinatio­n status, should quarantine for 5 days if they test positive. But in response to the staffing issues, the state made an exception for some asymptomat­ic health care workers until Feb. 1.

“We believe it’s important to value those workers and provide them sick leave protection­s,” Newsom said at his budget rollout on Jan. 10.

Democratic leaders of the Legislatur­e agree. “We look forward to working out the details and reaching early agreement on this budget action,” Senate President Pro Tem Toni Atkins told CalMatters.

Assemblyme­mber Wendy Carrillo, a Democrat from Los Angeles, said given the budget surplus, it was the right time to protect workers and help struggling small businesses.

“Workers should not have to make a choice between losing their job or taking care of their health or the health of a loved one. And small businesses, who are the heart of many communitie­s, need support as we move forward with pandemic and economic recovery efforts,” she said in a statement Tuesday. “These efforts are not mutually exclusive, they are complement­ary. We can do both.”

At a Jan. 13 virtual press conference organized by the labor federation, Carrillo and Sen. Dave Cortese, a Democrat from San Jose, addressed the urgency of the request.

“We have a worker shortage right now. Why would people re-enter the workforce if they’re told that if they contract COVID-19 or the variant of COVID-19, that they’re not going to be paid for the time off?” Cortese said. “We’re working against our own interests right now in the state of California and again, we need to correct that immediatel­y.”

The governor’s support came after months of lobbying by unions and public health groups, as well as the Work and Family Coalition, who are urging the Legislatur­e to act swiftly, well before final approval of the budget in June.

The United Food and Commercial Workers Western States Council, which represents 180,000 employees in California, is demanding an immediate reinstatem­ent of the two weeks of COVID leave as a “public health imperative.”

“Workers currently have no safety net if they are exposed or sick with COVID-19 just as the virus is breaking new records,” its president, Andrea Zinder, said in a statement.

 ?? PHOTO BY LUCY NICHOLSON — REUTERS ?? Alexis Reyna works at Chalio Mexican Restaurant in East Los Angeles on May 26, 2021. Legislator­s are discussing supplement­al paid sick leave for COVID-19.
PHOTO BY LUCY NICHOLSON — REUTERS Alexis Reyna works at Chalio Mexican Restaurant in East Los Angeles on May 26, 2021. Legislator­s are discussing supplement­al paid sick leave for COVID-19.
 ?? PHOTO BY ANNE WERNIKOFF — CALMATTERS ?? Martha Garrido lays out a California Domestic Worker’s Coalition shirt on the bed at her San Francisco home. Garrido says she was able to avoid falling behind on rent after breaking her hand earlier this year because her landlord gave her a break while she was unable to work.
PHOTO BY ANNE WERNIKOFF — CALMATTERS Martha Garrido lays out a California Domestic Worker’s Coalition shirt on the bed at her San Francisco home. Garrido says she was able to avoid falling behind on rent after breaking her hand earlier this year because her landlord gave her a break while she was unable to work.

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