2017 -- H 5413 | |
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LC001131 | |
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STATE OF RHODE ISLAND | |
IN GENERAL ASSEMBLY | |
JANUARY SESSION, A.D. 2017 | |
____________ | |
A N A C T | |
RELATING TO LABOR AND LABOR RELATIONS -- HEALTHY AND SAFE FAMILIES | |
AND WORKPLACES ACT | |
| |
Introduced By: Representatives Regunberg, Craven, Serpa, Maldonado, and Fogarty | |
Date Introduced: February 08, 2017 | |
Referred To: House Labor | |
It is enacted by the General Assembly as follows: | |
1 | SECTION 1. The General Assembly hereby finds and declares that: |
2 | (1) Most Rhode Islanders will at some time during each year need limited time off from |
3 | work to take care of their own health needs or the health needs of their family members. |
4 | (2) Nationally, thirty-six (36%) of private sector employees do not have any paid sick |
5 | leave time. In Rhode Island, access to paid sick leave is lower than the national average. Nearly |
6 | one hundred sixty-nine thousand one hundred ninety-five (169,195) Rhode Islanders who work in |
7 | the private sector or forty-one and a half percent (41.5%) of all private sector employees in Rhode |
8 | Island, lack paid sick time. |
9 | (3) Employees' access to paid sick leave time varies significantly by wage level and race. |
10 | Nationally, only one in four of the lowest-income employees, (twenty-seven percent (27%)) has |
11 | access to paid sick leave time, compared to eighty-seven percent (87%) of the highest-income |
12 | employees. In addition, Hispanic employees are less likely to have access to paid sick time than |
13 | white employees. Less than half of Hispanic employees (forty-six percent (46%)) have access to |
14 | paid sick leave, compared to sixty-three percent (63%) of white employees. |
15 | (4) Providing employees time off to attend to their own health care and the health care of |
16 | family members will help ensure a healthier and more productive workforce in the state of Rhode |
17 | Island. |
18 | (5) Seventy-six percent (76%) of children in Rhode Island are in families where all |
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1 | parents work, which means that parents without paid sick time must lose income and risk losing |
2 | their jobs when a child is ill or is in need of medical care. |
3 | (6) In the state of Rhode Island, one hundred thirty-four thousand (134,000) people serve |
4 | as caregivers for family members, work which has an aggregate value of nearly one billion, seven |
5 | hundred eighty million dollars ($1,780,000,000) per year. Nationally, sixty-one percent (61%) of |
6 | employees who juggle work with caregiving responsibilities have reported the need to make work |
7 | accommodations such as adjusting their work schedules or taking time off to provide care for a |
8 | family member. Working family caregivers cannot adequately care for their relatives without |
9 | access to paid sick time. |
10 | (7) Paid sick time will have a positive effect on the individuals and the overall public |
11 | health of Rhode Island by allowing employees to earn a limited number of hours per year to care |
12 | for themselves or a family member when illness strikes or medical needs arise. Earned paid sick |
13 | time will reduce recovery time, promote the use of regular medical providers rather than hospital |
14 | emergency departments, and reduce the likelihood of people spreading illness to other members |
15 | of the workforce and to the public. |
16 | (8) Paid sick time will allow parents to provide personal care for their sick children. |
17 | Parental care reduces a child’s recovery time and can prevent future health problems. Parents who |
18 | do not have paid sick time are nearly twice as likely as parents with paid sick time to send a sick |
19 | child to school or daycare. In addition, parents who do not have paid sick time are two and one- |
20 | half (2.5) times more likely to report taking their child or a family member to a hospital |
21 | emergency room because they were unable to take time away from work during their regular |
22 | work hours. |
23 | (9) Providing a minimal amount of paid sick time is affordable for employers and good |
24 | for business. Paid sick time results in reduced employee turnover, which leads to reduced costs |
25 | incurred from advertising, interviewing and training new hires. Replacing employees can cost the |
26 | employer approximately twenty-one percent (21%) percent of an employee's annual |
27 | compensation. |
28 | (10) Earned paid sick time will reduce the risk of "presenteeism" -- employees coming to |
29 | work with illnesses and health conditions that reduce their productivity -- a problem that costs |
30 | employers one hundred sixty billion dollars ($160,000,000,000) annually (two hundred seven |
31 | billion dollars ($207,000,000,000) after adjusting for inflation). |
32 | (11) Earned paid sick time levels the playing field by enabling smaller companies to |
33 | compete with larger companies. |
34 | (12) Earned paid sick time will reduce contagion. Employees in jobs with high levels of |
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1 | public contact, such as restaurant employees and child care employees, are very unlikely to have |
2 | paid sick time. As a result, these employees may have no choice but to go to work when they are |
3 | ill, thereby increasing the risk of passing illnesses on to co-workers and customers while also |
4 | jeopardizing their own health. Overall, people without paid sick time are one and one-half (1.5) |
5 | times more likely than people with paid sick time to go to work with a contagious illness like the |
6 | flu. |
7 | (13) A peer-reviewed epidemiological study found that nearly one in five (5) food service |
8 | employees had reported for work vomiting or with diarrhea in the past year, creating dangerous |
9 | health conditions. The largest national survey of U.S. restaurant employees found that nearly |
10 | sixty-three percent (63%) of restaurant wait staff and cooks have been ill when reporting for |
11 | work. |
12 | (14) In the event of an outbreak that presents a threat to public health for example, the |
13 | H1N1 outbreak of 2009 government officials request that sick employees stay home and keep |
14 | sick children home from school or child care to prevent the spread of the virus, and to safeguard |
15 | workplace productivity. However, because many employees lack paid sick time, they may be |
16 | unable to comply. |
17 | (15) During the height of the H1N1 pandemic, employees without access to paid sick |
18 | time were more likely than those with access to paid sick leave to go to work sick, and as a result, |
19 | the pandemic lasted longer in their workplaces as the virus spread from co-worker to co-worker. |
20 | One study estimates that lack of paid sick time was responsible for five million (5,000,000) cases |
21 | of influenza-like illness during the pandemic. |
22 | (16) More than one in four (4) American women report having experienced a negative |
23 | impact from sexual violence, physical violence and/or stalking by an intimate partner at some |
24 | point in their lives. Five million seven hundred thousand (5,700,000) women reported having |
25 | experienced intimate partner-related physical assaults and rapes in the last twelve (12) months. In |
26 | a national survey, nearly two million four hundred thousand (2,400,000) men reported having |
27 | experienced severe physical violence by an intimate partner in the previous twelve (12) months. |
28 | Many employees need time away from their jobs to care for their health after these incidents or to |
29 | find solutions, such as obtaining a restraining order or new housing, to prevent physical or sexual |
30 | abuse. |
31 | (17) Survivors of domestic and sexual violence are forced to lose days of paid |
32 | employment because of the violence they face. According to National Violence Against Women |
33 | Survey, the average intimate partner violence (IPV) rape victim misses eight and one-tenth (8.1) |
34 | days of paid work, the average IPV physical assault victim misses seven and two-tenths (7.2) |
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1 | days of paid work and the average IPV stalking victim misses ten and one-tenth (10.1) days of |
2 | paid work following victimization. Each year, victims of domestic violence are forced to miss |
3 | nearly eight million (8,000,000) days of paid work, costing more than seven hundred million |
4 | dollars ($700,000,000) annually due to victims' lost productivity in employment. |
5 | (18) Without job protection, survivors are in grave danger of losing their jobs. Between |
6 | twenty-five percent (25%) and fifty-two (52%) percent of domestic violence survivors report job |
7 | loss, due at least in part to the domestic violence. Loss of employment can be particularly |
8 | devastating for survivors of domestic violence, who often need economic security to ensure their |
9 | and their children's safety. |
10 | (19) As of November 2017, seven (7) states (including neighboring Connecticut and |
11 | Vermont), and the District of Columbia had adopted paid sick days legislation, as had two (2) |
12 | county governments, and 29 municipalities. In comparison, when Connecticut became the first |
13 | state to pass Paid Sick Days legislation in 2012, only San Francisco and DC had legislation in |
14 | place. |
15 | SECTION 2. Title 28 of the General Laws entitled "LABOR AND LABOR |
16 | RELATIONS" is hereby amended by adding thereto the following chapter: |
17 | CHAPTER 57 |
18 | HEALTHY AND SAFE FAMILIES AND WORKPLACE ACT |
19 | 28-57-1. Short title. |
20 | This chapter shall be known and may be cited as the "Healthy and Safe Families and |
21 | Workplaces Act." |
22 | 28-57-2. Legislative purpose. |
23 | The purpose of this chapter is: |
24 | (1) To ensure that all employees in Rhode Island can address their own health and safety |
25 | needs, as well as the health and safety needs of their family members, by requiring employers to |
26 | allow employees to earn a minimum level of paid sick leave time including time to care for their |
27 | family members; |
28 | (2) To diminish public and private health care costs and promote preventive health |
29 | services in Rhode Island by enabling employees to seek early and routine medical care for |
30 | themselves and their family members; |
31 | (3) To protect the public health in Rhode Island by reducing the risk of contagion; |
32 | (4) To promote the economic security and stability of employees and their families; |
33 | (5) To protect employees in Rhode Island from losing their jobs or facing workplace |
34 | discipline for using paid sick and safe leave time to care for themselves or their families; |
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1 | (6) To assist victims of domestic violence, sexual assault, or stalking and their family |
2 | members by providing them with job-protected time away from work to allow them to receive |
3 | treatment and to take the necessary steps to ensure their protection; |
4 | (7) To safeguard the public welfare, health, safety and prosperity of the people of Rhode |
5 | Island; and |
6 | (8) To accomplish the purposes described above in a manner that is feasible for |
7 | employers. |
8 | 28-57-3. Definitions. |
9 | As used in the chapter, the following words and terms have the following meanings: |
10 | (1) "Department" means the department of labor and training. |
11 | (2) "Domestic partner" means a party to a civil union as defined in chapter 3.1 of title 15 |
12 | or a person who meets the requirements in §36-12-1(3)(i)-(v) has the same meaning as that term |
13 | is defined in §8-8.2-20. |
14 | (3) "Domestic violence" means certain crimes when committed by one family or |
15 | household member against another as defined in §12-29-2. |
16 | (4) "Employee" means any person suffered or permitted to work by an employer, except |
17 | that independent contractors or subcontractors shall not be considered employees. |
18 | (5) "Employer" means any individual or entity includes any individual, partnership, |
19 | association, corporation, business trust, or any person or group of persons acting directly or |
20 | indirectly in the interest of an employer, in relation to an employee as defined in §28-12-2, but |
21 | does not include the United States government. |
22 | (6) "Family member" means: |
23 | (i) Regardless of age, a biological, adopted or foster child, stepchild or legal ward, a child |
24 | of a domestic partner, a child to whom the employee stands in loco parentis, or an individual to |
25 | whom the employee stood in loco parentis when the individual was a minor; |
26 | (ii) A biological, foster, stepparent or adoptive parent or legal guardian of an employee's |
27 | spouse or domestic partner or a person who stood in loco parentis when the employee or |
28 | employee's spouse or domestic partner was a minor child; |
29 | (iii) A person to whom the employee is legally married under the laws of any state, or a |
30 | domestic partner of an employee; |
31 | (iv) A grandparent, grandchild or sibling (whether of a biological, foster, adoptive or step |
32 | relationship) of the employee or the employee's spouse or domestic partner; or |
33 | (v) Any other individual related by blood or affinity whose close association with the |
34 | employee is the equivalent of a family relationship. |
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1 | (7) "Health care professional" means any person licensed under federal or Rhode Island |
2 | law to provide medical or emergency services, including, but not limited to, doctors, nurses, and |
3 | emergency room personnel. |
4 | (8) "Paid sick leave time" or "paid sick and safe leave time" means time that is |
5 | compensated at the same hourly rate and with the same benefits, including health care benefits, as |
6 | the employee normally earns during hours worked and is provided by an employer to an |
7 | employee for the purposes described in §28-57-4, but in no case shall the hourly wage paid leave |
8 | be less than that provided under §28-12-3. |
9 | (9) "Retaliatory personnel action" means denial of any right guaranteed under this chapter |
10 | and any threat, discharge, suspension, demotion, reduction of hours, reporting or threatening to |
11 | report an employee's suspected citizenship or immigration status, or the suspected citizenship or |
12 | immigration status of a family member of the employee to a federal, state or local agency, or any |
13 | other adverse action against an employee for the exercise of any right guaranteed herein including |
14 | any sanctions against an employee who is the recipient of public benefits for rights guaranteed |
15 | under this chapter. Retaliatory personnel action shall also include interference with or punishment |
16 | for in any manner participating in or assisting an investigation, proceeding, or hearing under this |
17 | chapter. |
18 | (10) "Sexual assault" means a crime as defined in §§11-37-2, 11-37-4 or 11-37-6. |
19 | (11) "Stalking" means a crime as defined in §§11-59-2 and 11-52-4.2, harassing another |
20 | person or willfully, maliciously and repeatedly following another person with the intent to place |
21 | that person in reasonable fear of bodily injury. |
22 | (12) "Year" means a regular and consecutive twelve (12) month period as determined by |
23 | the employer; except that for the purposes of §§28-57-8 and 28-57-10 of this chapter, "year" |
24 | means a calendar year. |
25 | (13) "CCAP Family child care provider" means a child care worker as defined in §40-6.6- |
26 | 2(2) |
27 | 28-57-4. Accrual of paid sick and safe leave time. |
28 | (a) All employees in Rhode Island shall accrue a minimum of one hour of paid sick and |
29 | safe leave time for every thirty (30) hours worked up to a maximum of fifty-six (56) hours per |
30 | year, unless the employer chooses to provide a higher annual limit. |
31 | (b) Employees who are exempt from the overtime requirements under 29 USC §213(a) |
32 | (1) Of the Federal Fair Labor Standards Act, 29 U.S.C. §§201 et seq., will be assumed to |
33 | work forty (40) hours in each work week for purposes of paid sick and safe leave time accrual |
34 | unless their normal work week is less than forty (40) hours, in which case paid sick and safe leave |
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1 | time accrues based upon that normal work week. |
2 | (c) Paid sick and safe leave time as provided in this chapter shall begin to accrue at the |
3 | commencement of employment or pursuant to the law's effective date, whichever is later. An |
4 | employer may provide all paid sick and safe leave time that an employee is expected to accrue in |
5 | a year at the beginning of the year. |
6 | (d) Employees shall be entitled to use accrued paid sick and safe leave time beginning on |
7 | the ninetieth calendar day following commencement of their employment, unless otherwise |
8 | permitted by the employer. On and after the ninetieth calendar day of employment, employees |
9 | may use paid sick and safe leave time as it is accrued. |
10 | (e) Paid sick and safe leave time shall be carried over to the following calendar year; |
11 | however, an employee's use of paid sick and safe leave time provided under this chapter in each |
12 | calendar year shall not exceed fifty-six (56) hours. Alternatively, in lieu of carryover of unused |
13 | earned paid sick and safe leave time from one year to the next, an employer may pay an employee |
14 | for unused earned paid sick and safe leave time at the end of a year and provide the employee |
15 | with an amount of paid sick and safe leave that meets or exceeds the requirements of this chapter |
16 | that is available for the employee's immediate use at the beginning of the subsequent year. |
17 | (f) Any employer with a paid leave time off policy who makes available an amount of |
18 | paid leave time off sufficient to meet the accrual requirements of this section that may be used for |
19 | the same purposes and under the same conditions, including with regards to employee notice and |
20 | documentation, as paid sick and safe leave time under this chapter is not required to provide |
21 | additional paid sick and safe leave time. |
22 | (g) Nothing in this chapter shall be construed as requiring financial or other |
23 | reimbursement to an employee from an employer upon the employee's termination, resignation, |
24 | retirement, or other separation from employment for accrued paid sick and safe leave time that |
25 | has not been used. |
26 | (h) If an employee is transferred to a separate division, entity or location, but remains |
27 | employed by the same employer, the employee is entitled to all paid sick and safe leave time |
28 | accrued at the prior division, entity or location and is entitled to use all paid sick and safe leave |
29 | time as provided in this chapter. When there is a separation from employment and the employee |
30 | is rehired within one year of separation by the same employer, previously accrued paid sick and |
31 | safe leave time that had not been used shall be reinstated. Further, the employee shall be entitled |
32 | to use accrued paid sick and safe leave time and accrue additional sick and safe leave time at the |
33 | re-commencement of employment. |
34 | (i) When a different employer succeeds or takes the place of an existing employer, all |
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1 | employees of the original employer who remain employed by the successor employer are entitled |
2 | to all earned paid sick and safe leave time they accrued when employed by the original employer, |
3 | and are entitled to use earned paid sick and safe leave time previously accrued. |
4 | (j) At its discretion, an employer may loan sick and safe leave time to an employee in |
5 | advance of accrual by such employee. |
6 | 28-57-5. Use of paid sick and safe leave time. |
7 | (a) Paid sick and safe leave time shall be provided to an employee by an employer for: |
8 | (1) An employee's mental or physical illness, injury or health condition; an employee's |
9 | need for medical diagnosis, care, or treatment of a mental or physical illness, injury or health |
10 | condition; an employee's need for preventive medical care; |
11 | (2) Care of a family member with a mental or physical illness, injury or health condition; |
12 | care of a family member who needs medical diagnosis, care, or treatment of a mental or physical |
13 | illness, injury or health condition; care of a family member who needs preventive medical care; |
14 | (3) Closure of the employee's place of business by order of a public official due to a |
15 | public health emergency or an employee's need to care for a child whose school or place of care |
16 | has been closed by order of a public official due to a public health emergency, or care for oneself |
17 | or a family member when it has been determined by the health authorities having jurisdiction or |
18 | by a health care provider that the employee's or family member's presence in the community may |
19 | jeopardize the health of others because of their exposure to a communicable disease, whether or |
20 | not the employee or family member has actually contracted the communicable disease; or |
21 | (4) Time off needed when the employee or a member of the employee's family is a victim |
22 | of domestic violence, sexual assault or stalking. |
23 | (b) Paid sick and safe leave time shall be provided upon the request of an employee. Such |
24 | request may be made orally, in writing, by electronic means or by any other means acceptable to |
25 | the employer. When possible, the request shall include the expected duration of the absence. |
26 | (c) When the use of paid sick and safe leave time is foreseeable, the employee shall make |
27 | a good faith effort to provide notice of the need for such time to the employer in advance of the |
28 | use of the sick and safe leave time and shall make a reasonable effort to schedule the use of sick |
29 | and safe leave time in a manner that does not unduly disrupt the operations of the employer. |
30 | (d) An employer that requires notice of the need to use earned paid sick and safe leave |
31 | time where the need is not foreseeable shall provide a written policy that contains procedures for |
32 | the employee to provide notice. An employer that has not provided to the employee a copy of its |
33 | written policy for providing such notice shall not deny earned paid sick and safe leave time to the |
34 | employee based on non-compliance with such a policy. |
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1 | (e) Paid sick and safe leave time may be used in the lesser of hourly increments or the |
2 | smallest increment that the employer's payroll system uses to account for absences or use of other |
3 | time. |
4 | (f) For paid sick and safe leave time of more than three (3) consecutive work days, an |
5 | employer may require reasonable documentation that the paid sick and safe leave time has been |
6 | used for a purpose covered by subsection (a) of this section if the employer has notified the |
7 | employee in writing of this requirement in advance of the employee's use of paid sick and safe |
8 | time. An employer may not require that the documentation explain the nature of the illness or the |
9 | details of the domestic violence, sexual assault, or stalking. |
10 | (1) Documentation signed by a health care professional indicating that paid sick leave |
11 | time is necessary shall be considered reasonable documentation under subsection (a) of this |
12 | section. |
13 | (2) One of the following, of the employee's choosing, shall be considered reasonable |
14 | documentation of an absence under subsection (a)(4) of this section: |
15 | (i) An employee's written statement that the employee or the employee's family member |
16 | is a victim of domestic violence, sexual assault, or stalking and that the leave taken was for one of |
17 | the purposes of §28-57-5(a)(4); |
18 | (ii) A police report indicating that the employee or employee's family member was a |
19 | victim of domestic violence, sexual assault, or stalking; |
20 | (iii) A court document indicating that the employee or employee's family member is |
21 | involved in legal action related to domestic violence, sexual assault, or stalking; or |
22 | (iv) A signed statement from a victim and witness advocate affirming that the employee |
23 | or employee's family member is receiving services from a victim services organization or is |
24 | involved in legal action related to domestic violence, sexual assault, or stalking. |
25 | (g) An employer's requirements for verification may not result in an unreasonable burden |
26 | or expense on the employee and may not exceed privacy or verification requirements otherwise |
27 | established by law. |
28 | (h) An employer may not require, as a condition of an employee's taking paid sick and |
29 | safe leave time, that the employee search for or find a replacement worker to cover the hours |
30 | during which the employee is using paid sick and safe leave time. |
31 | 28-57-6. Family child care providers. |
32 | CCAP family child care providers, shall accrue and may use paid sick and safe leave in |
33 | the same manner as do employees under this chapter. The implementation, but not the amount, of |
34 | paid sick and safe leave for CCAP family child care providers shall be a subject of negotiation |
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1 | with director of the department of administration under §40-6.6-4. The department of human |
2 | services shall promulgate any necessary regulations to implement the requirement of paid sick |
3 | and safe leave for CCAP family child care providers. |
4 | 28-57-7. Exercise of rights protected, retaliation prohibited. |
5 | (a) It shall be unlawful for an employer or any other person to interfere with, restrain, or |
6 | deny the exercise, or the attempt to exercise, any right protected under this chapter. |
7 | (b) An employer shall not take retaliatory personnel action or discriminate against an |
8 | employee or former employee because the person has exercised rights protected under this |
9 | chapter. Such rights include, but are not limited to, the right to request or use paid sick and safe |
10 | leave pursuant to this chapter; the right to file a complaint with the department or the courts or |
11 | inform any person about any employer's alleged violation of this chapter; the right to participate |
12 | in an investigation, hearing or proceeding or cooperate with or assist the department in its |
13 | investigations of alleged violations of this chapter; and the right to inform any person of their |
14 | potential rights under this chapter. |
15 | (c) It shall be unlawful for an employer's absence control policy to count paid sick and |
16 | safe leave time taken under this chapter as an absence that may lead to or result in discipline, |
17 | discharge, demotion, suspension, or any other adverse action. |
18 | (d) Protections of this section shall apply to any person who mistakenly but in good faith |
19 | alleges violations of this chapter. |
20 | (e) There shall be a rebuttable presumption of unlawful retaliatory personnel action under |
21 | this section whenever an employer takes action against a person within ninety (90) days of when |
22 | that person: |
23 | (1) Files a complaint with the department or a court alleging a violation of any provision |
24 | of this chapter; |
25 | (2) Informs any person about an employer's alleged violation of this chapter; |
26 | (3) Cooperates with the department or other persons in the investigation or prosecution of |
27 | any alleged violation of this chapter; |
28 | (4) Opposes any policy, practice, or act that is unlawful under this chapter; or |
29 | (5) Informs any person of their rights under this chapter. |
30 | 28-57-8. Notice and posting. |
31 | (a) Employers shall give employees written notice of the following at the commencement |
32 | of employment or by the effective date of this chapter, whichever is later, which shall include the |
33 | following information: |
34 | (1) Employees are entitled to paid sick and safe leave time; |
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1 | (2) The amount of paid sick and safe leave time; |
2 | (3) The terms of paid sick and safe leave time use guaranteed under this chapter; |
3 | (4) That retaliatory personnel actions against employees who request or use paid sick and |
4 | safe leave time is prohibited; |
5 | (5) That each employee has the right to file a complaint or bring a civil action if paid sick |
6 | and safe leave time, as required by this chapter, is denied by the employer or the employee is |
7 | subjected to retaliatory personnel action for requesting or taking paid sick and safe leave time; |
8 | and |
9 | (6) Contact information for the department where questions about rights and |
10 | responsibilities under this chapter can be answered. |
11 | (b) Employers shall comply with this section by supplying each of their employees with a |
12 | notice in English and in any language that is the first language spoken by at least five percent |
13 | (5%) of the employer's workforce that contains the information required in subsection (a) of this |
14 | section, provided that the notice has been translated into such language by the department. |
15 | (c) The amount of paid sick and safe leave time available to the employee, the amount of |
16 | paid sick and safe leave time taken by the employee to date in the year and the amount of pay the |
17 | employee has received as paid sick and safe leave time shall be recorded in, or on an attachment |
18 | to, the employee's regular paycheck or be made available at the employees request. |
19 | (d) Employers shall display a poster in a conspicuous and accessible place in each |
20 | establishment where such employees are employed. The poster displayed shall be in English and |
21 | in any language that is the first language spoken by at least five percent (5%) of the employer's |
22 | workforce that contains the information required in subsection (a) of this section, provided that |
23 | the poster has been translated into such language by the department. |
24 | (e) The department shall create and make available to employers, in all languages spoken |
25 | by more than five percent (5%) of Rhode Island's population and any language deemed |
26 | appropriate by the department, posters that contain the information required under subsection (a) |
27 | of this section. |
28 | (f) An employer who willfully violates the notice and posting requirements of this section |
29 | shall be subject to a civil fine in an amount not to exceed one hundred dollars ($100) for each |
30 | separate violation. |
31 | 28-57-9. Employer records. |
32 | Employers shall retain records documenting hours worked by employees and paid sick |
33 | and safe leave time taken by employees, for a period of three (3) years, and shall allow the |
34 | department access to such records, with appropriate notice and at a mutually agreeable time, to |
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1 | monitor compliance with the requirements of this chapter. When an issue arises as to an |
2 | employee's entitlement to paid sick and safe leave time under this chapter, if the employer does |
3 | not maintain or retain adequate records documenting hours worked by the employee and paid sick |
4 | and safe leave time taken by the employee, or does not allow the department reasonable access to |
5 | such records, it shall be presumed that the employer has violated the chapter, absent clear and |
6 | convincing evidence otherwise. |
7 | 28-57-10. Regulations. |
8 | The department shall coordinate implementation and enforcement of this chapter and |
9 | shall promulgate appropriate guidelines or regulations for such purposes. |
10 | 28-57-11. Enforcement. |
11 | (a) The department shall enforce the provisions of this chapter. In effectuating such |
12 | enforcement, the department shall establish a system utilizing multiple means of communication |
13 | to receive complaints regarding noncompliance with this chapter and investigate complaints |
14 | received by the department in a timely manner. The department is empowered to hold hearings |
15 | and shall cooperate with any employee in the enforcement of a claim against their employer in |
16 | any case where the claim is just and valid. |
17 | (b) Any person alleging a violation of this chapter shall have the right to file a complaint |
18 | with the department within one year of the date the person knew or should have known of the |
19 | alleged violation. The department shall maintain confidential the identity of any complainant |
20 | unless disclosure of such complainant's identity is necessary for resolution of the investigation or |
21 | otherwise required by law. The department shall, to the extent practicable, notify such |
22 | complainant that the department will be disclosing their identity prior to such disclosure. |
23 | (c) Upon receiving a complaint alleging a violation of this chapter, the department shall |
24 | investigate such complaint and attempt to resolve it through mediation. The department shall keep |
25 | complainants reasonably notified regarding the status of their complaint and any resultant |
26 | investigation. If the department believes that a violation has occurred, it shall issue to the |
27 | offending person or entity a notice of violation. The commissioner shall prescribe the form and |
28 | content of such notices of violation. The notice of violation shall be returnable to the |
29 | administrative tribunal authorized to adjudicate violations of this chapter. |
30 | (d) The department shall have the power to impose penalties as provided in subsection (h) |
31 | of this section and to grant an employee or former employee all appropriate relief. |
32 | (e) In the event a complaint deemed just and valid cannot be resolved by the department |
33 | through mediation, the department shall order a hearing thereon at a time and place to be |
34 | specified, and shall give notice thereof, together with a copy of the complaint or the purpose |
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1 | thereof, or a statement of the facts disclosed upon investigation, which notice shall be served |
2 | personally or by mail on any person, business, corporation, or entity of any kind affected thereby. |
3 | The hearing shall be scheduled within thirty (30) days upon determination that the complaint is |
4 | just and valid. The person, business, corporation, or entity shall have an opportunity to be heard |
5 | in respect to the matters complained of at the time and place specified in the notice. The hearing |
6 | shall be conducted by the department. The hearing officer in the hearing shall be deemed to be |
7 | acting in a judicial capacity, and shall have the right to issue subpoenas, administer oaths, and |
8 | examine witnesses. The enforcement of a subpoena issued under this section shall be regulated by |
9 | Rhode Island civil practice law and rules. The hearing shall be expeditiously conducted and upon |
10 | such hearing the hearing officer shall determine the issues raised thereon and shall make a |
11 | determination and enter an order within thirty (30) days of the close of the hearing, and forthwith |
12 | serve a copy of the order, with a notice of the filing thereof, upon the parties to the proceeding, |
13 | personally or by mail. The order shall dismiss the complaint or direct payment of penalties under |
14 | subsection (h) of this section and direct payment of reasonable attorneys' fees and costs to the |
15 | successful complaining party. |
16 | (f) The director may institute investigations into violations of this chapter absent receipt |
17 | of a complaint and may institute any action to ensure compliance with this chapter. |
18 | (g) Any agreement between the employee and employer that purports to waive the |
19 | provisions of this chapter shall be deemed void as against public policy. |
20 | (h) An employer who violates this chapter shall be liable for a civil penalty in an amount |
21 | not less than five hundred dollars ($500) and not greater than three thousand dollars ($3,000) for |
22 | each violation of this chapter for a first offense and up to five thousand dollars ($5,000) for each |
23 | violation of this chapter for any subsequent offense, which shall be shared equally between the |
24 | department and the aggrieved party. |
25 | (i) In determining the amount of any penalty imposed under this section, the director or |
26 | their designee shall consider the good faith of the employer, the size of the employer, the gravity |
27 | of the violation, the history of previous violations, and whether or not the violation was an |
28 | innocent mistake or willful. |
29 | (j)(1) The department, the attorney general, any person aggrieved by a violation of this |
30 | chapter, or any entity a member of which is aggrieved by a violation of this chapter may bring a |
31 | civil action in a court of competent jurisdiction against an employer violating this section. Such |
32 | action may be brought by a person aggrieved by a violation of this section without first filing an |
33 | administrative complaint. |
34 | (2) Upon prevailing in an action brought pursuant to this section, aggrieved persons shall |
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1 | recover the full amount of any unpaid paid sick time plus any actual damages suffered as the |
2 | result of the employer's violation of this chapter plus liquidated damages of at least as much as |
3 | provided as penalty amounts in subsection (h) of this section. Successful aggrieved persons shall |
4 | also be entitled to reasonable attorneys' fees. |
5 | (3) Upon prevailing in an action brought pursuant to this section, aggrieved persons shall |
6 | be entitled to such legal or equitable relief as may be appropriate to remedy the violation, |
7 | including, without limitation, reinstatement to employment, back pay and injunctive relief. |
8 | (4) The statute of limitations for a civil action brought pursuant to this section shall be for |
9 | a period of three (3) years from the date the alleged violation occurred or the date the employee |
10 | knew or should have known of the violation. |
11 | 28-57-12. Confidentiality and nondisclosure. |
12 | An employer may not require disclosure of details relating to domestic violence, sexual |
13 | assault, sexual contact or stalking or the details of an employee's or an employee's family |
14 | member's health information as a condition of providing paid sick and safe leave time under this |
15 | chapter. If an employer possesses health information or information pertaining to domestic |
16 | violence, sexual assault, sexual contact, or stalking about an employee or employee's family |
17 | member, such information shall be treated as confidential and not disclosed except to the affected |
18 | employee or with the permission of the affected employee. |
19 | 28-57-13. Greater sick and safe leave policies. |
20 | (a) This chapter provides minimum requirements pertaining to paid sick and safe leave |
21 | time and shall not be construed to preempt, limit, or otherwise affect the applicability of any other |
22 | law, regulation, requirement, policy, or standard that provides for greater accrual or use by |
23 | employees of sick and safe leave time, whether paid or unpaid, or that extends other protections |
24 | to employees. |
25 | (b) Nothing in this chapter shall be construed to supersede or preempt any provision of |
26 | any local law that provides greater rights to paid sick and safe leave time than the rights |
27 | established under this chapter. |
28 | (c) Nothing in this chapter shall be construed in a manner to discourage or prohibit an |
29 | employer from the adoption of a paid sick and safe leave time policy greater that provides greater |
30 | rights or benefits than the one required in this chapter. |
31 | (d) Nothing in this chapter shall be construed as diminishing the obligation of an |
32 | employer to comply with any contract, collective bargaining agreement, employment benefit plan |
33 | or other agreement that provides greater sick and safe leave time to an employee than required in |
34 | this chapter. |
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1 | (e) Nothing in this chapter shall be construed as diminishing the rights of public |
2 | employees regarding paid sick and safe leave or use of sick and safe leave time as provided in the |
3 | general laws. |
4 | 28-57-14. Public education and outreach. |
5 | The department shall develop and implement a multilingual outreach program to inform |
6 | employees, parents, and persons who are under the care of a health care provider about the |
7 | availability of paid sick and safe leave time under this chapter. This program shall include the |
8 | distribution of notices and other written materials in English and in all languages spoken by more |
9 | than five percent (5%) of Rhode Island's population and any language deemed appropriate by the |
10 | department to all child care and elder care providers, domestic violence shelters or victim services |
11 | organizations, schools, hospitals, community health centers, and other health care providers. |
12 | 28-57-15. Severability. |
13 | If any provision of this chapter or any rule or regulation created under this chapter, or the |
14 | application of any provision of this chapter to any person or circumstance shall be held invalid by |
15 | any court of competent jurisdiction, the remainder of the chapter, rule or regulation and the |
16 | application of such provision to other persons or circumstances shall not be affected thereby. The |
17 | invalidity of any section or sections or parts of any section of this chapter shall not affect the |
18 | validity of the remainder of this chapter and to this end the provisions of the chapter are declared |
19 | to be severable. |
20 | SECTION 3. This act shall take effect on January 1, 2018. |
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EXPLANATION | |
BY THE LEGISLATIVE COUNCIL | |
OF | |
A N A C T | |
RELATING TO LABOR AND LABOR RELATIONS -- HEALTHY AND SAFE FAMILIES | |
AND WORKPLACES ACT | |
*** | |
1 | This act would require all employers to provide their employees with a minimum level of |
2 | paid sick and safety leave including time to care for the employee's family members. |
3 | This act would take effect on January 1, 2018. |
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