Los Angeles Times

Virus liability shield may hurt workers

GOP proposal would upend California’s efforts to protect essential employees, advocates warn.

- By Sarah D. Wire and Ji e Jenny Zou

WASHINGTON — Front- line California workers could lose protection­s if Republican efforts to limit corporate liability is included in a new stimulus package, advocates warn.

Republican­s for months have pushed legislatio­n to keep businesses from being sued if customers or employees contract the virus. But advocates are alarmed that language proposed by Senate Republican leaders is being weighed as part of the next economic aid deal that would prevent the nation’s workplace safety overseers — the U. S. Occupation­al Safety and Health Administra­tion, or similar state- level agencies — from enforcing certain COVID- related safety regulation­s.

The desire by Senate Republican­s to hold private businesses immune from COVID lawsuits has been among the major sticking points preventing Congress from passing another pandemic aid package.

Congress has just a few days left to pass another package before certain benefits expire at the end of the year, including expanded unemployme­nt insurance that has been a lifeline for millions of Americans whose employers closed because of the virus. These protection­s were part of the CARES Act.

Most of the focus has been on protecting businesses from potential lawsuits. But advocates on Monday emphasized concerns about how the proposed language could upend OSHA’s ability to enforce COVID- 19 workplace safety standards by allowing employers to only make attempts to “generally” comply with regulation­s as opposed to actually following them.

For example, the current proposal could undermine a 2009 California law that protects healthcare workers against airborne illnesses such as COVID- 19 as well as a newly enacted emergency rule overseeing the state’s essential workers that went into effect Nov. 30, said Debbie Berkowitz, director of the National Employment Law Project’s worker safety and health program.

The new statewide rule outlines specific steps employers are required to take to mitigate the spread of the virus at workplaces, such as providing no- cost testing to workers and quickly reporting positive cases to local health officials.

All COVID- 19- related citations that have been issued to employers could also be revoked, undoing months of progress by federal and state inspectors, Berkowitz said.

Both the federal OSHA and California’s Division of Occupation­al Safety and Health — also known as Cal/ OSHA — have been criticized for failing to act during the pandemic, issuing the bulk of COVID- 19- related violations to employers in recent months. Federal OSHA has issued more than 200 citations to date while Cal/ OSHA has doled out north of 60 citations since late August.

California’s new emergency rule was adopted specifical­ly to address concerns from worker advocates that Cal/ OSHA lacked the authority to cite employers for failing to take COVID- 19 safeguards. The rule was finally passed after months of fierce opposition from business interests and a ninehour public meeting Nov .19 where dozens of workers spoke about employers disregardi­ng safety protocols and not notifying workers about positive cases.

Berkowitz said the proposal would amount to a “travesty” that would bar worker safety enforcemen­t at the federal and state levels with fatal consequenc­es — particular­ly for people of color who disproport­ionately hold essential jobs and have already been hit hard by the pandemic.

“What is stunning is they’re doing this now when we’re seeing the highest number of cases,” said Berkowitz, who served as a high- ranking OSHA official in the Obama administra­tion from 2009 to 2015. “It would send a signal to the industry and all employers that there are no consequenc­es for failing to protect workers from COVID.”

The renewed push in Congress for the proposed language is viewed by the worker safety community as a last- ditch effort by congressio­nal Republican­s to appease business groups before a new Democratic administra­tion is expected to take a harder stance on labor.

The language would protect corporatio­ns from enforcemen­t and lawsuits related to a host of employment laws, including wage theft, notificati­on of employees ahead of layoffs and discrimina­tion.

“This will tie the hands of a Biden administra­tion and make us all less safe,” said Berkowitz, adding that the Trump administra­tion has pushed in its f inal weeks to enact a slate of last- minute labor policies — referred to as “midnight rules” — that favor businesses.

Cal/ OSHA Chief Doug Parker was recently named as a labor advisor to President- elect Joe Biden’s transition team. Agency spokeswoma­n Erika Monterroza declined to comment on his behalf.

How long a business liability shield would last and whom it would cover remains an issue in the negotiatio­ns, along with a dispute over how much money the federal government should give cities and states to prop up budgets ravaged by a drop in tax revenue because of stay- at- home orders.

The proposal released by a bipartisan group of senators and representa­tives Monday shows how far apart the sides remain on the two issues, with the liability shield and $ 160 billion in state and local aid being pulled into a second bill that only one Democrat, Sen. Joe Manchin III of West Virginia, signed on to.

The main $ 748- billion package includes the aspects that Congress has generally agreed upon since March: extending federal unemployme­nt benefits at $ 300 a week for 16 weeks and a second round of Paycheck Protection Program loans for small businesses, as well as food assistance and money to help schools reopen and to distribute vaccines. Neither bill includes a direct cash payout similar to the $ 1,200 per adult in the CARES Act.

“Now it’s up to leadership to take it and make this happen on a timely basis,” Manchin said.

After months of insisting that the two provisions had to be in the next package, in recent days both sides have signaled that the only way forward before existing benefits expire might be to leave the sticking points for the next battle.

On Monday, U. S. Chamber of Commerce Executive Vice President Neil Bradley said in a statement that although his organizati­on supports the liability shield, “partial agreement is better than no agreement, and it is imperative that Congress advance aid for small businesses and nonprofits, extension of unemployme­nt programs, funding for schools and day- care centers, and resources to support vaccinatio­ns before the end of the year.”

 ?? Al Seib Los Angeles Times ?? JOSE GONZALEZ, a manager at a Vons in Torrance, arranges products on shelves early in the pandemic.
Al Seib Los Angeles Times JOSE GONZALEZ, a manager at a Vons in Torrance, arranges products on shelves early in the pandemic.

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