Printer Friendly
The Free Library
14,506,428 articles and books
Member login
User name  
Password 
 
Join us Forgot password?

Employers' New Headache: SF's Paid Sick Leave Law.




On November 7, San Francisco San Francisco (săn frănsĭs`kō), city (1990 pop. 723,959), coextensive with San Francisco co., W Calif., on the tip of a peninsula between the Pacific Ocean and San Francisco Bay, which are connected by the strait known as the Golden  voters approved the first law in the nation mandating that employers provide paid sick leave to all employees. The law is effective February 5, 2007. Proposition F provides an important benefit to employees, but poses several vexing and unresolved questions certain to give employers headaches.

The New Law's Provisions

Until now, whether an employer provided paid sick leave or not has been strictly a matter of contract or employer policy. For San Francisco employers, Prop. F will require paid sick leave.

The new law requires that an employee accrue To increase; to augment; to come to by way of increase; to be added as an increase, profit, or damage. Acquired; falling due; made or executed; matured; occurred; received; vested; was created; was incurred.  one hour of paid sick leave for every 30 hours worked, with accrual accrual,
n continually recurring short-term liabilities. Examples are accrued wages, taxes, and interest.
 only in full-hour increments. An employee may accrue sick leave up to a cap of 72 hours for most employees, at which point accrual stops until the employee uses some sick leave. Employees of a "small business" can accrue up to 40 hours of unused sick leave. Small businesses may be difficult to identify. The measure defines them as an employer "for which fewer than ten persons work for compensation during a given week," including part-time and temporary employees and persons hired through a temporary services Temporary Services is an artist collective of three people based in Chicago, Illinois, USA. They have been collaborating on art projects, public events, publications, and exhibitions since 1998.  or staffing agency. The "given week" used as a point of measurement is undefined. There is no minimum number of employees required before the mandate applies.

Prop. F applies to all employers within the "geographic boundaries" of the City and County of San Francisco. It does not apply to city contractors (unless their employees are in San Francisco). It also does not extend to employers operating on City-owned property outside San Francisco, such as San Francisco International Airport Coordinates:

“SFO” redirects here. For other uses, see SFO (disambiguation).

For the television series, see .
, which is outside of the City's geographic boundaries.

The law extends to part-time and temporary employees, again including individuals hired through "a temporary services or staffing agency or similar entity."

Sick leave accrual begins on the law's effective date. For new employees who begin work after that date, accrual begins after 90 days of employment. Once accrued, sick leave must be carried over until used. Employers must be careful not to provide for a forfeiture The involuntary relinquishment of money or property without compensation as a consequence of a breach or nonperformance of some legal obligation or the commission of a crime. The loss of a corporate charter or franchise as a result of illegality, malfeasance, or Nonfeasance.  of available sick leave once it has accrued, as can be a common practice at specified intervals under traditional sick leave policies. Unused sick leave does not have to be paid upon termination.

Prop. F requires that paid sick leave be available for the same purposes listed in California's "kincare" law (Lab. Code s. 233(b)(4)): for an employee's illness or injury, or for receiving medical care, treatment, or diagnosis, including medical appointments.

To prepare for the new law, employers need to review any current sick leave and paid time off policies. Employers without a paid sick leave policy will need to develop one. Employers who currently have a paid sick leave policy will need to ensure that adequate paid leave is provided for covered purposes. It is difficult to estimate how much paid sick leave might be required in a year, so it might not always be possible to establish a set amount of leave accrual each year designed to comply with the law in all circumstances. An employee working a standard 2,080-hour year would theoretically accrue 69 hours of paid leave under the law. However, exact accrual will depend on the number of hours an employee actually works. It also can vary based on whether an employee has reached the accrual cap and the amount of leave used.

One result of the law may be to cause employers to combine vacation and paid sick leave into "paid time off" that can be used for either reason. The downside Downside

The dollar amount by which the market or a stock has the potential to fall.

Notes:
You might hear someone say that the downside on stock XYZ is $10. What that means is that the stock could fall by this amount if things got bad.
 is that, under California law California Law consists of 29 codes, covering various subject areas, the State Constitution and Statutes. See also
  • Statute
  • Bill (proposed law)
  • California State Legislature
External links
  • http://www.leginfo.ca.
, an employer then would have to cash out any accrued, but unused, paid time off when employment terminates. California law does not otherwise require payment for unused sick leave at the end of the employment. In many cases, employers with paid time off policies already may comply with the law, but the policies will need to be reviewed for compliance.

Prop. F likely will require changes to absence control policies. The new law prohibits an absence control policy that counts paid sick leave taken as an absence that may lead to an adverse action. The result may be that any use of paid sick leave required by Prop. F is a protected absence. In this regard, Prop. F is much broader than California's kincare law, which only prohibits an absence control policy from counting leave taken for kincare purposes. Prop. F also protects an employee's use of sick leave for his or her own care.

No Rules or Regulations

Prop. F will be enforced by San Francisco's Office of Labor Standards Enforcement ("OLSE OLSE Office of Labor Standards Enforcement (San Francisco, CA city government)
OLSE Ordinary Least-Squares Estimation
"). The OLSE can investigate alleged violations, order various forms of relief, and impose penalties. The measure authorizes the OLSE to issue "appropriate guidelines guidelines,
n.pl a set of standards, criteria, or specifications to be used or followed in the performance of certain tasks.
 or rules." At this time, the agency advises that it does not anticipate issuing implementing regulations or rules. Thus, official interpretation may not appear soon.

Vexing And Unresolved Questions

Employed in San Francisco

Prop. F covers employees within San Francisco, but does not require that the employer be in San Francisco. It is unclear to what extent the ordinance A law, statute, or regulation enacted by a Municipal Corporation.

An ordinance is a law passed by a municipal government. A municipality, such as a city, town, village, or borough, is a political subdivision of a state within which a municipal corporation has been
 will apply to employees who work partly in San Francisco but whose office or base is elsewhere, or to employees who telecommute See telecommuting.  from San Francisco to a job elsewhere. The measure intends to require "employers benefiting from the opportunity to do business" in San Francisco to provide paid sick leave. With this objective, it may require employees who work partly in San Francisco to receive at least a prorated benefit.

Temporary Employees

Prop. F covers temporary employees, including employees hired through an agency and defines "employer" to include any person who employs an employee through a temporary services or staffing agency, or who exercises control over an employee's wages, hours or working conditions. This provision suggests that the employer using the temporary employee's services may be responsible for providing paid sick leave, although it is usually the agency that pays the temporary employee. Allocation of responsibility for compliance may ultimately depend on contractual arrangements between the employer and agency.

Accrual by Exempt Employees

Overtime exempt employees are not excluded from coverage under Prop. F, and like other employees their accrual depends on hours worked. Thus, the ordinance will effectively force employers to keep track of exempt employees' hours, something that they are not otherwise required by law to do. However, keeping such records alone will not jeopardize jeop·ard·ize  
tr.v. jeop·ard·ized, jeop·ard·iz·ing, jeop·ard·izes
To expose to loss or injury; imperil. See Synonyms at endanger.
 an employee's exempt status.

What Rate of Pay?

The law does not specify the rate at which accrued sick leave must be paid when taken. Typically, the employer's policy or agreement determines the rate. However, with paid sick leave mandated by law essentially as replacement wages, an employer may be wise to pay sick leave taken at the employee's straight time hourly rate.

To derive an hourly rate for exempt employees, the employer will have to convert annual or monthly salary into a weekly salary, and then determine an hourly rate. State and federal law prescribe different methods for deriving the hourly rate. Under California law, the hourly rate is the weekly salary divided by no more than 40 hours. Under the federal Fair Labor Standards Act Fair Labor Standards Act or Wages and Hours Act, passed by the U.S. Congress in 1938 to establish minimum living standards for workers engaged directly or indirectly in interstate commerce, including those involved in production of goods bound , the hourly rate is the weekly salary divided by the employee's actual hours worked in the week. The California method results in a higher hourly rate, which it may be wise to follow.

Fully commissioned employees present a tougher challenge. Their regular rate always varies, and they usually do not accrue paid leave. Pending further guidance, an employer may have to pay sick leave based on the pay for salespersons who are not fully commissioned, if any.

Relationship of Prop. F to Family And Medical Leave

Under state law, an employer may require an employee to use any paid sick leave during what would otherwise be unpaid family and medical leave, but only if the leave is for the employee's own serious medical condition. While Prop. F permits paid sick leave to be used to attend to a family member's illness, an employer cannot require an employee to use it for that purpose in lieu of Instead of; in place of; in substitution of. It does not mean in addition to.  taking unpaid family leave. However, the employer can require an employee to use accrued paid sick leave for the employee's own illness.

Relationship to "Kincare"

Like the state kincare law, Prop. F requires that employers also allow employees to use sick leave to provide the same aid and care for a child, spouse, parent, domestic partner, or child of a domestic partner. Yet, the measure goes further, covering siblings siblings npl (formal) → frères et sœurs mpl (de mêmes parents) , grandparents grandparents nplabuelos mpl

grandparents grand nplgrands-parents mpl

grandparents grand npl
, and grandchildren GRANDCHILDREN, domestic relations. The children of one's children. Sometimes these may claim bequests given in a will to children, though in general they can make no such claim. 6 Co. 16. , including step-relationships. It further includes domestic partners registered "under any state or local law," rather than only with the State of California, as with the kincare law.

Prop. F allows an employee without a spouse or registered domestic partner to designate "one person as to whom the employee may use paid sick leave to aid or care for the person." An employee must be given the opportunity to make this designation no later than the date the employee has worked 30 hours after beginning paid sick leave accrual, after which the employee has 10 workdays to make the designation. Then, employees must be given an annual opportunity to make or change a designation. The law does not address whether this choice must be given a year after the initial designation, or whether an employer may have an annual "open designation period" for all employees at the same time.

Preemption preemption

U.S. policy that allowed the first settlers, or squatters, on public land to buy the land they had improved. Since improved land, coveted by speculators, was often priced too high for squatters to buy at auction, temporary preemptive laws allowed them to acquire
 And Union Exemption

Prop. F does not appear to conflict with state or federal law, and thus the headaches it may bring to employers will not be subject to an easy challenge. California has not mandated paid sick leave or signaled an intent to preempt pre·empt or pre-empt  
v. pre·empt·ed, pre·empt·ing, pre·empts

v.tr.
1. To appropriate, seize, or take for oneself before others. See Synonyms at appropriate.

2.
a.
 local regulation in this area. The federal Employee Retirement Income Security Act The Employee Retirement Income Security Act of 1974 (ERISA), 29 U.S.C.A. § 1001 et seq. (1974), is a federal law that sets minimum standards for most voluntarily established Pension and health plans in private industry to provide protection for individuals enrolled in these plans.  of 1974 preempts state and local regulation of certain benefit plans. However, if sick leave is paid out of an employer's general assets (the usual case), federal regulations treat it as a "payroll practice" excluded from ERISA's preemption. Prop. F specifically exempts employees covered by a collective bargaining agreement The contractual agreement between an employer and a Labor Union that governs wages, hours, and working conditions for employees and which can be enforced against both the employer and the union for failure to comply with its terms.  if the contract waives the ordinance requirements in "clear and unambiguous terms."

Due to the complexity of the new law, as well as the many as yet unanswered questions that it raises, employer efforts at compliance will likely prove throbbing throb  
intr.v. throbbed, throb·bing, throbs
1. To beat rapidly or violently, as the heart; pound.

2. To vibrate, pulsate, or sound with a steady pronounced rhythm:
 to human resource professionals and managers alike. Experienced employment counsel can help employers develop personnel policies consistent with Prop. F and can monitor continuing developments in this area.

The content of this article is intended to provide a general guide to the subject matter. Specialist advice should be sought about your specific circumstances.

Ms Nancy Ober

Littler Mendelson Littler Mendelson P.C. is a San Francisco-based law firm with one of the largest employment law practices in the United States. History and practice
The firm was founded in 1942 by a deputy Attorney General of California and a director of the War Labor Board, initially to
 

650 California Street

20th Floor

San Francisco

California

CA 94108-2693

UNITED STATES United States, officially United States of America, republic (2005 est. pop. 295,734,000), 3,539,227 sq mi (9,166,598 sq km), North America. The United States is the world's third largest country in population and the fourth largest country in area.  

Tel: 4154331940

Fax: 4159863925

E-mail: Jmetcalf@littler.com

URL URL
 in full Uniform Resource Locator

Address of a resource on the Internet. The resource can be any type of file stored on a server, such as a Web page, a text file, a graphics file, or an application program.
: www.littler.com

Click Here for related articles

(c) Mondaq Ltd, 2006 - Tel. +44 (0)20 8544 8300 - http://www.mondaq.com
COPYRIGHT 2006 Mondaq Ltd.
No portion of this article can be reproduced without the express written permission from the copyright holder.
Copyright 2006 Gale, Cengage Learning. All rights reserved.

 Reader Opinion

Title:

Comment:



 

Article Details
Printer friendly Cite/link Email Feedback
Title Annotation:analysis of employers law
Publication:Mondaq Business Briefing
Geographic Code:1USA
Date:Dec 6, 2006
Words:1826
Previous Article:A Comparative Study Of The Chinese Patent Law Practice.
Next Article:Legal Project Management - Developing And Managing The Scope Of Work, Schedule, Budget And Communications For Legal Transactions And Dispute...
Topics:



Related Articles
Pandemic Flu Planning Presents Legal And Logistical Challenges For Employers.
New San Francisco Paid Sick Leave Ordinance-Be Prepared!
Ballot Initiatives Passed On Election Day Will Affect How Employers Do Business In Eight States.
Setting those myths of labor laws straight.(Business)
Highlights Of New San Francisco Sick Leave Ordinance: Impact Is National.
San Francisco Paid Sick Leave Ordinance.
What's New For Employers In The People's Republic Of China In 2008?
Ohio Healthy Families Act (OHFA): Coming Soon To A Ballot Near You?
Employment Alert: New Jersey Passes Paid Family Leave Law.
Labour And Employment Law Update - August 2008.

Terms of use | Copyright © 2009 Farlex, Inc. | Feedback | For webmasters | Submit articles