Culture

Seattle's proposed sick-leave plan is problematic

So, you need more sick leave if you work for a larger company? Huh? And why would the city Office of Civil Rights suddenly be put in charge of enforcing a business regulation?

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Jordan Royer

So, you need more sick leave if you work for a larger company? Huh? And why would the city Office of Civil Rights suddenly be put in charge of enforcing a business regulation?

We can all agree that every worker should have some amount of paid sick  leave. Unfortunately, the proposal before the city council to  mandate minimum sick leave requirements within the city of Seattle is problematic for several  reasons.

First, the Seattle Office of Civil Rights should not be the agency in  charge of regulating businesses. This role is already filled by the  Department of Finance  and Administration, which grants business licenses. They have the  capacity, staff resources, and expertise to administer regulations.

Second,  the premise that employees of larger businesses get sick for longer  periods of time than employees of smaller businesses doesn’t make sense.  If you are a business  of 249 employees, the hiring of the 250th employee would  force you to go from five mandated sick days per employee to nine days — for  every employee. In other words, adding one employee would cost you the  same as adding five FTEs. But, really, why is there  a difference in sick leave between a 249-employee company and a 250-employee company?

Third,  why are we proposing this now? With businesses struggling and the city  of Seattle losing businesses to other cities in King County over the  last decade, why would  we propose a regulation that provides disincentives for businesses to  hire more people and grow? This is a city with a jobs problem, one that has suffered job losses.

And  finally, it is still an open question whether the city should jump into  developing and regulating employment law, a role usually filled by the  state. If this is a  good idea, then it would also be a good idea for Seattle to have a  higher minimum wage than the rest of the state. I don’t think you’d find  many on the city council who would support doing this because they  know (like sick leave mandates), the minimum wage is better addressed  at a state level.

I  don’t see a problem with mandating some level of sick leave for every  working person in the state. And if some minimum is offered locally, it  would probably be OK. I  would hope that, someday, a national health care system — something the  rest of the industrialized world takes for granted — would take the  place of some of these local initiatives. That would be good for the  health of our people and for the economy.

But  the city council and mayor need to consider all of the unintended  consequences and the sort of “mission creep” that can happen when  governments open up new regulatory  venues. And these concerns aside, they should at least create regulations that make  sense. The need for sick days for an individual doesn’t increase — or decrease — with  the size of the company.

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Jordan Royer

By Jordan Royer

Jordan Royer left city government in 2007 to accept the position of vice president for external affairs in the Seattle office of the Pacific Merchant Shipping Association, where he currently works rep