October 3, 2022

Confusion over Abortion Coverage Persists even in Deep Blue States

               

When the Supreme Court overturned Roe v. Wade earlier this summer it seemed as if lines in the sand had been drawn between deep blue states such as New York or California, where abortion would remain legal, and access to it protected further, and states such as Texas, bent on ever more restrictive laws proscribing or outright banning the practice. But in an odd twist, some workers in those deep blue states are realizing that their health insurance may not cover the practice.

This is what Gothamist reported on in August when it learned that workers who are living in New York, but may be employed by a company in a state where abortion is banned, may not be covered by their health care provider. In one example, someone who works for a New York-based non-profit learned that because her company utilizes a novel “co-employment” scheme with a company based in Texas, she is not covered for the routine procedure except in the case of serious risk to the mother. 

Co-employment is a cost-cutting measure, where another company “adopts” employees as their own. The practice is not the only thing complicating abortion access. Many companies that have employees in multiple states can purchase health insurance outside of New York, thereby not having to comply with New York coverage laws.

These stories have highlighted issues that have become more relevant since remote work really took off with the pandemic. It also brought to the fore the knowledge that New York State still has many areas in which it can improve no-cost abortion access to all citizens, something that both Governor Hochul and Mayor Adams have prioritized since the Dobbs decision. 

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COVID-19 and Work

March 9, 2020
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Employers and employees have questions about what steps they should be taking to help protect against COVID-19, the infectious disease caused by the most recently discovered coronavirus in the workplace. We have compiled some useful resources to help you understand what actions to take at this time related to work.

With Michael Bloomberg in the Race, It's Time We Talk About NDAs (again)

February 25, 2020
Pregnancy Discrimination
Sexual Harassment
In 2018, Governor Cuomo signed a law that banned many NDAs and mandatory arbitration for complaints, but some activists and policymakers argued that the state had focused too narrowly on sexual harassment, and the 2019 laws expanded the 2018 laws to include protections against NDAs in other forms of workplace discrimination.

The Postpartum Ad the Oscars Wouldn't Run

February 24, 2020
Pregnancy Discrimination
Paid Family Leave
Sometimes reality is too real for Hollywood and the culture machine, as was demonstrated when ABC and the Academy decided not to air an ad dealing straightforwardly with the reality of postpartum life. The ad for Frida Mom, a retailer in the baby and new mother field, depicted a women confronting in a realistic manner the stress and changes that occur for new mothers.

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