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Yeah, they need to fix this bill. But this is a good idea that deserves support, and shouldn't leave the decision to offer sick leave for swine flu in the hands of the employer. (We all know how shaky that can be.) What's wrong with simply requiring a doctor's note?

With H1N1 flu fears spreading as fast as the sickness itself, a leading House Democrat wants rapid action on legislation that would give employees five paid sick days.

But in rushing out the measure on Tuesday, November 3, Rep. George Miller, D-California and chairman of the House Education and Labor Committee, roiled paid leave advocates who worry that he gives employers too much power to determine who can stay home.

The author of broader paid sick leave legislation, Rep. Rosa DeLauro, D-Connecticut, is not on board.

“I am concerned that the Miller bill —while a modest step forward — would establish a limp paid leave benefit that is triggered by the employer and can also be taken away by the employer; and it offers no real guarantee that a working parent can care for a sick child,” DeLauro said in a statement Thursday, November 4, to Workforce Management.

DeLauro added that she “can work with Chairman Miller to make it a better bill.”

The House labor committee will hold a hearing on Miller’s measure, the Emergency Influenza Containment Act, the week of November 16. It’s unclear when or if a companion Senate bill will be introduced.

President Barack Obama declared the H1N1 pandemic — popularly known as swine flu — a national emergency on October 24.

Miller caught some in the advocacy community and on Capitol Hill by surprise with his proposal, which would guarantee five paid sick days to an employee if an employer “directs” or “advises” him or her to go home. The employer can end the leave at any time.

“Sick workers advised to stay home by their employers shouldn’t have to choose between their livelihood and their co-workers’ or customers’ health,” Miller said in a statement.

He asserts that at least 50 million workers lack paid sick leave.

The bill applies to companies with 15 or more employees but exempts those that already offer at least five days of sick leave.

DeLauro’s bill, the Healthy Families Act, would allow workers to accrue up to seven days of paid sick leave a year and gives them time off to care for sick family members.



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Yeah, we should let employers and companies make that call.

While they are at it, they should pass legislation that would have hungry coyotes protecting endangered species.

As Wile E. could never catch the Roadrunner.

Meep! Meep!

Thats because he bought all his crap at the 1960's Wal Mart - ACME.

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Q U E S T I O N:

WHERE ARE THE CDC COMPARABLE FIGURES OF H1N1 vs. SEASONAL FLU?

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Why can't some of these people see beyond the most recent headlines and understand the real problem. As it appears, there is at least some effort to try improve this bill. (Thanks Rep. Rosa DeLauro)

MORE?!

Sounds like the bill is full of pork.

I am a small business owner (15 employees). Where am I supposed to get this money from to pay an employee that is not AT work Producing revenue?

Walmart & Ilk, Inc. like to hide behind small businesses that are probably exempt.

And the answer may just be taking sick days into account when analyzing the costs of doing business as many civilized nations do.

check your backyard.

I drive cab for a living and I don't get paid for time off...so, as usual, I get nothing if I get sick and need time off. Thanks for nothing!

Walmart employees earn a sick time-off benefit, but they sure as hell better not use it. As reported by ABC News:

This practice is not exclusive to Walmart. Many companies record & score each time an employee uses his/her hard-earned "benefit", and then later use the tally for disciplinary actions.

Miller and DeLauro should include in their legislation financial penalties for companies that count H1N1 sick "occurrences" when the companies calculate attendance infractions. (BTW, those attendance infractions are a big deal, affecting performance reviews and raises.) The money in the pool can be used to reimburse employers' sick pay, maybe not entirely but at least partially.

Hmmmmmm....Well, it always helps to get extra days off. But don't be fooled by all the falderal about vaccinations. Big pharma has been howling incessantly to whip up public anxiety about a flu virus that is less virulent than ordinary flu.

I don't blame Big Pharma for trying to make money, but I for one will not be fooled by their manufactured hysteria.

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