The minimum wage is going up in New York, and a new sick leave law is also coming into effect for 2021.
The hourly minimum wage is now US$14 an hour in Long Island and Westchester under changes that went into effect Wednesday. The wage in the rest of New York has increased to US$12.50, up from US$11.80.
New York began phasing in a US$15 minimum wage boost statewide in 2016, and New York City reached US$15 in 2018 and 2019.
The minimum wage will keep going up each year in the rest of the state until it reaches US$15. The state’s labor commissioner will announce the next increase by October 1 at a rate based on the consumer price index.
New York is one of 15 states with a paid sick leave law, and workers can use sick leave to recover from an illness themselves, care for a sick family member, or seek help for themselves or a family member for domestic violence, sexual assault, stalking or human trafficking.
About 1.3 million New Yorkers didn’t have access to paid sick leave before the law, according to governor Andrew Cuomo’s office, and nearly 1 in 4 workers has reported being fired or threatened with termination for taking sick time.
“No one should have to choose between going to work sick or caring for a sick loved one and not getting a paycheck, especially as we continue to battle the COVID-19 pandemic,” lieutenant governor Kathy Hochul said.
Employees at most businesses can start using sick days that the new law allowed them to start accruing in September, at a rate of one hour for every 30 hours worked. Any unused sick leave has to be carried over to the following year.
Companies with more than 100 employees must provide workers with up to 56 hours — equivalent to seven days — of paid sick leave each year. That decreases to 40 hours — five days — at most companies with five to 99 employees.
Workers at companies with fewer than four employees and net income less than $1 million must provide up to 40 hours of unpaid sick leave each year.
It’s not likely that the minimum wage increases will substantially harm Long Island, Westchester and New York’s economic recovery from the global pandemic, according to state Labor Commissioner Roberta Reardon in a mid-December report. Unemployment rates dropped from an April peak of 15.9 percent in Long Island and Westchester and 15.4 percent upstate, to 7.1 percent and 6.8 percent in October.
“Before this crisis, we achieved record low unemployment rates while increasing the minimum wage — improving the lives of thousands of New Yorkers — and we will rebuild our economy while continuing to lead the nation in the fight for economic justice,” she said. “This investment in our workers once again proves that in New York we believe a fair day’s work deserves a fair day’s pay.”-AP
In this April 17, 2020, file photo, nurses demonstrate outside Jacobi Medical Center in New York, while protesting a new hospital policy requiring a doctor's note for paid sick leave. New laws are going into effect in 2021 in New York, one of 15 states with a paid sick leave law.