Bill Text: HI SB2492 | 2022 | Regular Session | Introduced
Bill Title: Relating To Paid Sick Leave.
Spectrum: Partisan Bill (Democrat 5-0)
Status: (Introduced - Dead) 2022-01-24 - Referred to LCA, JDC/WAM. [SB2492 Detail]
Download: Hawaii-2022-SB2492-Introduced.html
THE SENATE |
S.B. NO. |
2492 |
THIRTY-FIRST LEGISLATURE, 2022 |
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STATE OF HAWAII |
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A BILL FOR AN ACT
RELATING TO PAID SICK LEAVE.
BE IT
ENACTED BY THE LEGISLATURE OF THE STATE OF HAWAII:
SECTION
1. The legislature finds that:
(1)
Most workers in the State,
at some time during the year, need temporary time off from work to take care of
their personal health needs or the health needs of members of their families;
(2) According to the United States Bureau of Labor
Statistics, paid sick leave was not available to twenty-three per cent of private
industry workers in March 2021. These benefits
were available to twelve per cent of workers in the lowest twenty‑fifth
per cent wage category and available to thirty-seven per cent of workers in
the highest twenty-fifth per cent wage category, which leaves a significant
segment of the nation's workers without paid sick leave. In Hawaii, an estimated forty‑two per cent
of private sector workers lack paid sick leave, according to Hawai‘i
Children's Action Network Speaks!, citing a 2015 analysis by the Institute for Women's
Policy Research;
(3) Low-income workers are significantly less
likely to have paid sick leave benefits in comparison to other members of the workforce.
Only one in five low-income workers has access to paid sick leave;
(4) The COVID-19 pandemic has made it glaringly evident
that paid sick leave is essential for workers and their families to be able to quarantine,
recover, and care for others without having to choose between lack of a paycheck
and their health and the well-being of the community. It has become apparent that more than ever, paid
sick leave is a critical public health tool in combatting the spread of COVID-19,
illness, and other diseases and has a positive effect on public health;
(5) Providing workers time off to attend to their
personal health care needs and the health care needs of family members would
ensure a healthier and more productive workforce in the State;
(6) Every day, an estimated 157,000 unpaid family caregivers
provide one hundred thirty-one million hours of care a year in Hawaii at a value
of $2,100,000,000, according to AARP Hawai‘i.
Without access to paid sick leave, working
family caregivers cannot adequately care for relatives;
(7) Paid sick leave will reduce health care expenditures
by promoting access to primary and preventive care. Nationally, providing all workers with paid
sick leave would result in $1,100,000,000 in annual savings in hospital
emergency room costs, with nearly half of the savings coming from publicly funded
health insurance programs such as medicare, medicaid, and the state children's
health insurance program. Access to paid
sick leave can also help decrease the likelihood that a worker will put off
needed care and increase the use of preventive care among workers and their
family members;
(8) Paid sick leave will allow parents to provide
personal care for their sick children. Parental
care makes children's recovery faster and can prevent future health problems. Parents who do not have paid sick leave are
more than twice as likely as parents with paid sick days to send a sick child
to school or day care and are 2.5 times as likely to report taking their child
or other family member to a hospital emergency room because they were unable to
take time off from work during regular work hours;
(9) Paid sick leave will reduce contagion. Workers in jobs with high levels of public
contact, such as restaurant workers and child care workers, are very unlikely
to have paid sick leave. As a result, these
workers may have no choice but to go to work when they are ill, thereby
increasing the risk of passing illnesses on to co-workers and customers while
jeopardizing their own health. Overall,
people without paid sick leave are 1.5 times more likely than people with paid
sick leave to go to work with a contagious illness;
(10) Employees frequently lose their jobs or are
disciplined for taking sick leave to care for sick family members or even to
recover from their own illness. One in six
workers reports that the worker or a family member has been fired, suspended,
punished, or threatened by an employer because the worker or family member
needed to take sick leave for themselves or a family member;
(11) When an outbreak that presents a threat to public
health occurs, such as the COVID-19 pandemic, government officials request that
sick workers stay home and keep sick children home from school or child care to
prevent the spread of the illness and to safeguard workplace productivity. However, to protect their paychecks and their
jobs, many workers who lack paid sick leave are unable to comply;
(12) Providing a minimal amount of paid sick leave
is affordable for employers. Paid sick
leave results in reduced worker turnover, which leads to reduced costs incurred
for advertising, interviewing, and training new hires. Replacing workers can cost anywhere from sixteen
to two hundred per cent of annual compensation;
(13) Paid sick leave will reduce the risk of
"presenteeism", or workers coming to work with illnesses and health conditions
that reduce their productivity, a problem that costs the national economy
$160,000,000,000 annually; and
(14) Paid sick leave will reduce the competitive
disadvantage currently faced by many employers that do choose to provide sick
time to their workers.
The
purpose of this Act is to establish the right for workers to accrue paid sick
leave to:
(1) Ensure that all workers in the State can
address their own health needs and the health needs of their families by requiring
employers to provide a minimum level of paid sick leave, including time for
family care;
(2) Diminish public and private health care costs
in the State by enabling workers to seek early and routine medical care for
themselves and their family members;
(3) Protect public health in the State by reducing
the risk of contagion;
(4) Promote economic security and stability of workers
and their families in the State;
(5) Protect employees in the State from losing their
jobs when they use sick leave to care for themselves or their families;
(6) Safeguard public welfare, health, safety, and
prosperity of the people of the State; and
(7) Accomplish all of the above in a manner that
is feasible for employers.
SECTION
2. The Hawaii Revised Statutes is amended
by adding a new chapter to be appropriately designated and to read as follows:
"CHAPTER
PAID
SICK LEAVE
§ -1
Definitions. As used in this
chapter, unless the context clearly requires otherwise:
"Department" means the department
of labor and industrial relations.
"Director" means the director of
labor and industrial relations.
"Employee" has the same meaning
as defined in the federal Fair Labor Standards Act, title 29 United States Code
section 203(e), and additionally includes recipients of public benefits who
are engaged in work activity as a condition of receiving public assistance and
public employees who are not subject to the civil service laws of the State, a
political subdivision, or a public agency. The term "employee" does not include
sole proprietors and independent contractors.
"Employer" has the same meaning
as defined in the federal Fair Labor Standards Act, title 29 United States Code
section 203(d).
"Family member" means:
(1) A biological, adopted, or foster child;
stepchild; legal ward; a child of a reciprocal beneficiary; or a child to whom
the employee stands in loco parentis;
(2) A biological, adoptive, or foster parent;
stepparent; legal guardian of an employee or an employee's spouse or reciprocal
beneficiary; or a person who stood in loco parentis when the employee was a
minor child;
(3) A spouse or reciprocal beneficiary;
(4) A grandparent or a spouse or reciprocal
beneficiary of a grandparent;
(5) A grandchild;
(6) A biological, adopted, or foster sibling; or a
spouse or reciprocal beneficiary of a biological, adopted, or foster sibling;
and
(7) Any other individual related by blood or
affinity whose close association with the employee is the equivalent of a
family relationship.
"Health care professional" has
the same meaning as in section 432E-1.
"Labor organization" has the same
meaning as in section 378-1.
"Paid sick leave" means time away
from work provided by an employer to an employee that is compensated at the
same hourly rate and with the same benefits, including health care benefits, as
the employee normally earns during hours worked.
§ -2 Accrual of paid sick leave. (a) All employees who work in the State for more
than eighty hours in a year shall have the right to paid sick leave as provided
in this chapter.
(b) All
employees shall accrue a minimum of one hour of paid sick leave for every
thirty hours worked. Employees shall not
accrue more than fifty-six hours of paid sick leave in a calendar year, unless
the employer provides a higher limit.
(c) Employees
who are exempt from overtime requirements under the federal Fair Labor
Standards Act, title 29 United States Code section 213(a)(1), shall be assumed
to work forty hours in each work week for purposes of paid sick leave
accrual unless the employee's normal work week is less than forty hours, in
which case paid sick leave shall accrue based upon the actual hours in the
normal work week.
(d) Paid
sick leave as provided in this chapter shall begin to accrue at the later of
the commencement of employment or the effective date of this chapter.
(e) Employees
shall be entitled to use accrued paid sick leave beginning on the ninetieth
calendar day following commencement of employment. After the ninetieth calendar day of
employment, employees may use paid sick leave as it is accrued.
(f) Paid
sick leave shall be carried over to the following calendar year; provided that
an employee's use of paid sick leave pursuant to this chapter in each calendar
year shall not exceed fifty-six hours, unless the employer provides a higher
limit.
(g) An
employer shall not be required to provide additional paid sick leave if the
employer has a paid leave policy that makes available an amount of paid leave
sufficient to meet the accrual requirements of this chapter and that may be used
for the same purposes and under the same conditions as paid sick leave under
this chapter.
(h) Nothing
in this section shall be construed as requiring financial or other reimbursement
to an employee from an employer upon the employee's termination, resignation, retirement,
or other separation from employment for unused accrued paid sick leave.
(i) If
an employee is transferred to a separate division, entity, or location but remains
employed by the same employer, the employee shall be entitled to all paid sick
leave accrued at the prior division, entity, or location and shall be entitled
to use all paid sick leave as provided in this chapter. If an employee is separated from employment
and subsequently rehired within six months of separation by the same employer,
the employee's previously accrued and unused paid sick leave shall be
reinstated. In addition, the employee
shall be entitled to use accrued paid sick leave and to accrue additional paid
sick leave as of the date of re-commencement of employment.
(j) An
employer may advance paid sick leave to an employee prior to its accrual by the
employee.
§ -3 Use of paid sick leave. (a) An employee may use paid sick leave during
absences from work due to:
(1) An employee's mental or physical illness, injury,
or health condition;
(2) An employee's need for medical diagnosis,
care, or treatment of a mental or physical illness, injury, or health condition;
(3) An employee's need for preventive medical care;
(4) An employee's need to seek medical attention,
legal services, or victim services for a mental or physical illness, injury, or
health condition caused by domestic abuse, sexual assault, or harassment to the
employee or a family member, or related to preparation for or participation in a
civil or criminal proceeding;
(5) An employee's need for preventive medical care;
(6) Care of a family member with a mental or physical
illness, injury, or health condition; care of a family member who needs medical
diagnosis, care, or treatment of a mental or physical illness, injury, or
health condition; or care of a family member who needs preventive medical care;
and
(7) Closure of the employee's place of business by
order of a public official due to a public health emergency, an employee's need
to care for a child whose school or place of care has been closed by order of a
public official due to a public health emergency, or care for a family member
when it has been determined by the health authorities having jurisdiction or by
a health care professional that the family member's presence in the community
would jeopardize the health of others because of the family member's exposure to
a communicable disease, regardless of whether the family member has actually
contracted the communicable disease.
(b)
Paid sick leave shall be provided upon
the oral request of an employee. When
possible, the request shall include the expected duration of the absence.
(c)
When the use of paid sick leave is
foreseeable, the employee shall make a good faith effort to provide notice of the
need for the leave to the employer in advance of the use of the paid sick leave
and shall make a reasonable effort to schedule the use of paid sick leave in a
manner that does not unduly disrupt the operations of the employer.
(d)
Accrued paid sick leave may be used in
smaller than hourly increments or the smallest increment that the employer's
payroll system uses to account for absences or use of other time.
§ -4
Supplemental paid sick leave; public health
emergencies. (a)
Notwithstanding section -2,
on the date a public health emergency is declared, each employer shall
supplement each employee's accrued paid sick leave under this section as
necessary to ensure that an employee can take the following amounts of paid
sick leave:
(1) For employees who normally work forty or more
hours in a week, at least eighty hours of paid sick leave in a calendar year;
and
(2) For employees who normally work fewer than
forty hours in a week, at least the greater of the amount of time the employee
is scheduled to work in a fourteen-day period or the amount of time the
employee actually works on average in a fourteen-day period.
(b)
An employer may count an employee's
unused accrued paid sick leave under section -2 toward the supplemental
paid sick leave required by this section.
(c)
An employee may use paid sick leave under
this section until four weeks after the official termination or suspension of
the public health emergency for any absence related to the public health emergency,
including:
(1) An employee's need to self-isolate because the
employee has been diagnosed with a communicable illness that is the cause of the
public health emergency;
(2) The employee is experiencing symptoms of a communicable
illness that is the cause of the public health emergency;
(3) The employee's need to seek or obtain a
medical diagnosis, medical care, medical treatment, or preventative care for
symptoms of a communicable illness that is the cause of the public health emergency;
or
(4) The employee's need to provide care for a
family member who is self-isolating after being diagnosed with, is experiencing
symptoms of, or is seeking a medical diagnosis, medical care, or medical
treatment for a communicable illness that is the cause of the public health emergency.
§ -5
Notice and posting. (a) An employer shall give its employees notice of
the following:
(1) That employees are entitled to paid sick
leave;
(2) The amount of paid sick leave granted pursuant
to this chapter;
(3) The terms of paid sick leave use as guaranteed
under this chapter; and
(4) That each employee has the right to file a
complaint or bring a civil action if paid sick leave, as required by this
chapter, is denied by the employer.
(b)
An employer shall comply with this section
by providing the information required in subsection (a) by:
(1) Individualized notice; or
(2) Displaying a poster in a conspicuous and
accessible place in each establishment where its employees are employed.
The
notice or poster shall be in English and in any language that is the first language
spoken by at least five per cent of the employer's workforce.
(c)
The director shall create and make
posters available to employers, in all languages currently being used by the
department for other employment posters, that contain the information required
under subsection (a) for the employer's use in complying with this section.
(d)
An employer who wilfully violates the
notice and posting requirements of this section shall be subject to a civil
fine in an amount not to exceed $100 for each separate offense. Each failure to issue notice or display a poster
pursuant to this section shall constitute a separate offense.
§ -6 Employer records. An employer shall retain records
documenting hours worked by employees and paid sick leave taken by employees
for a period of five years and shall allow the director access to the records,
with appropriate notice and at a mutually agreeable time, to monitor compliance
with the requirements of this chapter. If
an issue arises as to an employee's entitlement to paid sick leave under this
chapter, it shall be presumed that the employer has violated this chapter,
absent clear and convincing evidence otherwise, if the employer does not
maintain or retain adequate records documenting hours worked by the employee
and paid sick leave taken by the employee or does not allow the director reasonable
access to the records.
§ -7 Enforcement. (a) An employee or other person may report to the
director any suspected violation of this chapter. The director shall encourage reporting pursuant
to this subsection by keeping confidential, to the maximum extent permitted by
applicable laws, the name and other identifying information of the employee or
person reporting the suspected violation; provided that with the authorization
of the person, the director may disclose the person's name and identifying information
as necessary to enforce this chapter or for other appropriate purposes.
(b) The
director, the attorney general, any person aggrieved by a violation of this chapter,
or any labor organization, a member of which is aggrieved by a violation of this
chapter, may bring a civil action in a court of competent jurisdiction against
an employer who violates this chapter. The action may be brought without first filing
an administrative complaint.
(c) Upon
prevailing in an action brought pursuant to this section, aggrieved persons
shall recover:
(1) The full amount of any paid sick leave to
which the person is entitled;
(2) Actual damages suffered as the result of the employer's
violation of this chapter; and
(3) Reasonable attorney's fees.
Aggrieved persons shall also be entitled to
equitable relief as may be appropriate to remedy the violation including
reinstatement, back pay, and injunctive relief.
(d) The
statute of limitations for a civil action brought pursuant to this chapter
shall be for a period of three years from the date the alleged violation
occurred.
(e) Actions
brought pursuant to this chapter may be brought as a class action.
§ -8 Confidentiality and nondisclosure. An employer shall not require disclosure
of details of an employee's medical condition as a condition of providing paid
sick leave under this chapter. If an
employer possesses health information or information pertaining to the details
of a medical condition about an employee or employee's family member, the information
shall be treated as confidential and shall not be disclosed except to the
affected employee or with the permission of the affected employee.
§ -9
Employer adoption of more generous sick
leave policies; no effect on contracts, agreements, and plans providing more
generous sick leave. (a)
Nothing in this chapter shall be
construed to discourage or prohibit an employer from the adoption or retention
of a paid sick leave policy more generous to the employee than the one required
by this chapter.
(b) Nothing
in this chapter shall be construed as diminishing the obligation of an employer
to comply with any contract, collective bargaining agreement, employment
benefit plan, or other agreement providing more generous paid sick leave to an
employee than required by this chapter.
(c) Nothing
in this chapter shall be construed as diminishing the rights of public
employees regarding paid sick leave or use of sick leave as provided by law.
(d) This
chapter shall provide the minimum requirements of paid sick leave and shall not
be construed to preempt, limit, or otherwise affect the applicability of any
other law, rule, requirement, policy, or standard that provides for greater
accrual or use by employees of sick leave, whether paid or unpaid, or that
extends other protections to employees."
SECTION 3. If any provision of this Act, or the application thereof to any person or circumstance, is held invalid, the invalidity does not affect other provisions or applications of the Act that can be given effect without the invalid provision or application, and to this end the provisions of this Act are severable.
SECTION 4. This Act does not affect rights and duties that matured, penalties that were incurred, and proceedings that were begun before its effective date.
SECTION 5. This Act shall take effect on July 1, 2022; provided
that in the case of employees covered by a collective bargaining agreement in
effect on July 1, 2022, this Act shall take effect on the date of termination,
renewal, or amendment of the collective bargaining agreement then in effect.
INTRODUCED BY: |
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Report Title:
Employment; Paid Sick Leave
Description:
Requires employers to provide a minimum amount of paid sick leave to employees to be used to care for themselves or a family member who is ill or needs medical care and supplemental paid sick leave to employees under certain public health emergency conditions.
The summary description
of legislation appearing on this page is for informational purposes only and is
not legislation or evidence of legislative intent.