December 26, 2017

Paid Family Leave for Public Employees

As employers and employees across New York State get ready for New York State’s Paid Family leave to go into effect on January 1st, public employees who are not covered by the law are looking on in frustration.

Although New York City has a separate paid family leave policy for its employees who are considered management, that leaves hundreds of thousands of New York City’s public employees without coverage by any paid family leave policy.  Some of those workers are profiled in this New York Times article.

Under the New York State Paid Family Leave Law, public employers may opt-in to the law, and labor unions can collectively bargain with the employer to offer Paid Family Leave benefits. It will be interesting to see whether unions will bargain for Paid Family Leave, and which public employers offer Paid Family Leave, and if they choose to do so based on the same formula of the state law, or if they will create their own rules.

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This Week in FFCRA Complaints: Dismissals While Seeking Paid Leave

September 11, 2020
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Disability Discrimination
It appears employers continue to terminate workers who are supposed to be protected under the FFCRA. This week, we’ve highlighted several cases where employees were waiting for test results or already diagnosed with Covid-19 and subsequently fired when seeking paid leave.

Employees Push Back at Tech Companies for Giving Parents too Much

September 11, 2020
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It might seem like vanilla stuff for some of the world’s almost capitalized companies in the world to provide extra support to employees during a global pandemic, but not so at companies like Facebook and Twitter, where a rift has formed between parents, non-parents and employers over the companies’ policy responses to daycare and school closures.

The Berke-Weiss Law Weekly Roundup: A nurse fights for safer workplaces

September 8, 2020
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There was some decent news this week in the employment outlook, depending on how you look at it. The positive is that roughly 1.37 million jobs were added this week and the unemployment rate dropped to 8.4 percent. The negative is that nearly 20 million Americans remain unemployed and of those 1.37 million jobs added over 230,000 hires are census workers, who will be out of a job shortly.

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