The Denver Post

Don’t abandon Faith Winter’s family leave

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Sen. Faith Winter has been trying to solve a problem so intractabl­e the entire nation has grappled with it for decades — how to provide workers with paid leave when they or a member of their family, including newborns, need care.

Winter has been diligently chipping away at this issue in Colorado for years. She has patiently educated us all about the need for paid family leave. She has researched policies in other states extensivel­y. She has commission­ed a task force to study the issue and she has been willing to compromise.

Sadly, it appears compromise is now a dirty word in American politics. Two co-sponsors of Winter’s paid family leave bill withdrew their support just as the Colorado General Assembly began to consider the legislatio­n. Rep. Matt Gray has kept his name on the bill, meaning it’s still possible for the legislatio­n to move through the Senate and the House even without co-sponsors Rep. Monica Duran and Sen. Angela Williams.

We don’t mean to say this is an easy policy to develop and implement — in fact it is extremely difficult. The Denver Post editorial board was still researchin­g the specifics of Winter’s bill when we learned it seemed likely the bill would die — not because of opposition from the right but because of opposition from the left.

Why is that so concerning? It’s a symptom of the times where our political parties are discouragi­ng compromise and favoring a myway-or-the-highway mentality. The art of compromise is something that Colorado politician­s are notorious for embracing and the last thing Coloradans should want is a gridlocked system.

We think there are multiple ways to ensure that Colorado employees are paid during times of extended leave to care for a sick or dying relative, to care for a long-term illness or to care for a newborn. Most full-time employees who have been with a company for at least a year are already guaranteed job protection for 12 weeks of family leave. The trick is to find a way so that all, or at least a portion, of that leave is also paid.

As we understand the legislatio­n proposed by Winters and Gray, an employee must have worked 180 days with a company before state law would mandate the employer provide paid leave. That is 36 workweeks or half a year for a full-time employee before they qualify. That’s far more comprehens­ive coverage than the status quo and is surely a step in the right direction. It also would allow part-time workers to eventually get coverage, although it may take more than a year to hit the 180-day mark if it’s a part-time gig. Could some compromise be met to make sure that parttime employees are covered quicker? We would hope lawmakers could hammer that problem out. Requiring some period of continuous work before an employee is eligible for the benefit can protect employers, but increasing­ly Americans are working multiple parttime jobs to make ends meet.

It would be a shame for these ideas — who gets covered and for how long, and the best mechanism to fund that coverage — to not get a hearing because lawmakers are unwilling to compromise or perhaps unwilling to really heed the concerns of this state’s business community.

Perhaps the legislatio­n is too complicate­d for us to expect it to pass half-way through the legislativ­e session but at the very least Winter’s bill deserves a robust hearing that hammers out all the potential flaws and benefits of this approach to the paid family leave problem.

Members of The Denver Post’s editorial board are Megan Schrader, editor of the editorial pages; Lee Ann Colacioppo, editor; Justin Mock, CFO; Bill Reynolds, general manager/ senior vp circulatio­n and production; Bob Kinney, vice president of informatio­n technology; and TJ Hutchinson, systems editor.

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