2/18/2009 7:22:49 PM
sounds like an Obama idea if I've ever heard one. Keep those money printing presses rolling!
2/18/2009 7:30:23 PM
Yes, Obama is busily spending his time at the NC legislature.
2/18/2009 7:43:24 PM
policy (and shit) roll down hill
2/18/2009 7:45:32 PM
2/18/2009 8:10:37 PM
Do that in normal economic times and you will get business closure, followed by higher prices, and finally a return to normalcy. Do that during a recession and you accelerate the economic ruin, prolonging and deepening the recession. Just ask Hoover and FDR, they know how to turn a severe recession into a generation long depression.[Edited on February 18, 2009 at 9:09 PM. Reason : .,.]
2/18/2009 9:09:43 PM
I thought the point of sick pay was not just b.c your employer feels he has a moral obligation to offer it. The most important reason is to discourage sick employees from coming in and spreading contagious diseases to others that could have a severe negative effect on output.The trade off of letting workers take a week of sick pay rather they are sick or faking it is worth the potential risk having having an epidemic sweep through your office.
2/18/2009 9:24:07 PM
ugh. whats wrong with letting individual businesses decide what is best for themselves? jesus.
2/18/2009 9:36:06 PM
Having to hire 1.3 extra workers out of a crew of 50, that's a 2.6% increase in payroll. It seems like a bargin, if it will help insure that workers don't have to come into work sick. It's not just themselves sick affect. If they are cooks, or work with the public, there is potential for a lot of people getting sick. Even in business they could infect an office full of people, with a loss in productivity. It sounds like it could be not only good for businesses, but good for th public.
2/18/2009 10:04:29 PM
Very typical politician's ploy: Force employers to pay for some benefit and then take credit for it. "I got you paid sick leave!"
2/18/2009 11:17:45 PM
[Edited on February 18, 2009 at 11:26 PM. Reason : .]
2/18/2009 11:24:13 PM
2/18/2009 11:25:21 PM
2/18/2009 11:28:44 PM
2/18/2009 11:31:31 PM
What Anecdotes are you referring ot?
2/18/2009 11:31:35 PM
2/18/2009 11:36:26 PM
2/18/2009 11:38:21 PM
^^^ Just what I've observed in my work place.^^^^ Depends. The article isn't quite clear, but it seems this bill targets all workers. Since most full time employees at places get sick leave, I would guess this bill targets mostly part time workers, where losing a shift isn't a huge chuck of change (compared to losing 2 or 3 because you worked yourself to the bone).And when we talk about doing this to protect waiters and servers and bartenders and such, do we account for the fact that this sick leave will likely only pay their wage (minimum) and not account for the tips they could be accruing that shift? I would imagine that would provide incentives to work even though you have sick leave.
2/18/2009 11:41:30 PM
in a perfect world where people only take sick days when they are sick i can kinda agree with this (although i still wouldnt like a law mandating it). but if this passes it will just be used as vacation time. 7 days a year is crazy, if this passed employers would have to cut back vacation benefits to compensate. i'm trying to find more information, but are there at least certain exemptions? the company i work for hires close to a thousand seasonal employees, if they all got 7 days "vacation" it would blow the labor budgets out of the water.
2/18/2009 11:45:17 PM
Well i don't skip work b.c i have a stuffy nose.
2/18/2009 11:46:34 PM
even requiring a note adds a lot of overhead to companies with a lot of employees because someone has to check, process, and keep records of all of those notes. a lot of companies now have "personal days" and don't require a note because they assume you will use the days responsibly. my biggest problem with this is the amount of time and seemingly lack of exemptions. i think i get 2 sick days a year and 1 or 2 personal days or something like that. 7 days is insane
2/18/2009 11:50:51 PM
^^Neither do I, but when I run a 104 fever, I don't need to pay a doctor to tell me "Yep, you're sick. Probably a virus, take two advil as needed, drink lots of fluids, rest up and try to avoid tonsil hockey for the next few days".[Edited on February 18, 2009 at 11:51 PM. Reason : dsf]
2/18/2009 11:51:09 PM
Obviously doesn't apply to service jobs, but for thinking jobs, it's possible that fewer hours increases total productivity.Some people are assuming that unintended consequences are only negative.
2/19/2009 12:01:45 AM
[Edited on February 19, 2009 at 12:17 AM. Reason : n/m. i'm an idiot]
2/19/2009 12:16:44 AM
^^^lol if you have a 104 fever you have some issues
2/19/2009 7:30:58 AM
2/19/2009 8:15:20 AM
hahaha... This is great. So now, an employer will have to pay the person who doens't show up AND the person they call in to replace them. Brilliant! I have an idea. You want to implement this? Then make the government pay for it. Oh, that would be a lot harder to sell huh?
2/19/2009 9:22:33 AM
I agree, 56 hours is a bit much.
2/19/2009 10:02:37 AM
anyone else get the feeling that our government just goes around looking for stuff to regulate? I got an idea, how about one of them actually balance a budget and prove they know what they are talking about in regards to running a business (thats what government is, after all) before they instruct private businesses how they ought to operate. they all live in fucking dream world that just rains cash down on them that they spend with very little thought. most have no idea how it works in the real world.
2/19/2009 10:31:37 AM
I hang out with a lot of government employees and they all get paid sick days. But as they say it, "why would anyone waste a sick day when they were sick?" Me and my best friend are taking a sick day on friday to watch movies. His co-worker took a sick day last friday to build a four-day weekend, so he took his family to the beach. That is just how it works there; sick-days are really vacation days, and that is fine. The job they do really does not need them there everyday, so allowing them to take random days off does not cause a problem. However, not all businesses can do that. Many jobs cannot simply be done later. As such, this should be left up to negotiations between the employer and his labor markets. If workers would prefer getting paid higher wages to getting paid sick leave, then so be it. If a worker at that factory disagrees, there are employers offering paid sick (vacation) leave.
2/19/2009 10:35:06 AM
2/19/2009 10:43:07 AM
They said 56 hours, so the employer could be like you get 4 hours of pay for every sick day taken? And let someone come in for a half-day for those days to offset the labor, and just wing the other 4 hours? I say you can make a plan to cover such situations and not even increase overhead costs.All in all, I am not sure how I feel about the bill yet, but it seems like it could help and hurt.[Edited on February 19, 2009 at 11:04 AM. Reason : /]
2/19/2009 11:03:02 AM
2/19/2009 11:36:24 AM
come sit down in my office and show me how to replace any of my staff with half days, i would love to hear your plan. if I could get away with only having anyone work 4 hours then I would already be operating with a reduced staff and saving on labor.if I was forced to do this then I would have to increase the staff and cut wages so that I could afford this. it wouldn't be so bad after I made those changes, but I don't think thats the consequence they are hoping for.someone in this thread said, "its just a week" no, its more than a week, 5 days is a week. I could understand protecting their job and not allowing employers to replace them for being sick, but forcing them to pay for it is ridiculous. other people are saying that it won't be bad because you can make your employees prove they are sick. except you can't, you start getting into major privacy issues when you go down that line of questioning.
2/19/2009 11:52:22 AM
this law would also affect hiring practices, as it is now even more in the employers interest to only hire young, healthy employees with healthy families
2/19/2009 11:57:53 AM
logic. reasoning. end of thread.
2/19/2009 12:25:11 PM
2/19/2009 12:27:04 PM
2/19/2009 12:59:55 PM
The only economic justification I can see is if there is a real public health issue. While this is possible I seems sketchy to me. I would have to see the evidence.The case would be that some employees prefer no sick leave in exchange for higher wages. Employers theoretically should be indifferent between the two. However, these employees are imposing a cost on everyone else by spreading disease.However, if the purpose here is to expand benefits to employees my expectation is that this would be offset by lower wages.
2/19/2009 1:10:49 PM
2/19/2009 1:12:27 PM
2/19/2009 1:49:40 PM
^That's their point. Give people in those jobs sick days and they will find a way to use them all up. Guaranteed.
2/19/2009 7:16:46 PM
^That's understandable but at the same time, there are people who really need this. As I said I am not sure how I feel about it just yet. The only qualm I has about this so far is passing on the cost to the customers. That I feel fairly confident that any business should be able to handle this if they are managing their resources correctly.[Edited on February 19, 2009 at 7:27 PM. Reason : /]
2/19/2009 7:24:45 PM
I don't want my burger flipper at McD's coming in with strep throat spreading his germs on my burger bun b.c he has to get his wage in order to pay his babies mama's child support
2/19/2009 7:48:59 PM
It is immoral for the gov't to force one person to pay benefits to someone else. A job should be a mutual decision between the employer and potential employee. If the employee cannot convince the employer to give him paid time off or any other goody, then he should seek employment somewhere else.
2/19/2009 8:09:46 PM
yet you wonder why people like Castro and other communist dictators are able to come to power.Free markets are good yes.Though if the big corporations can lobby to get favorable policies and laws past; whats wrong with the voting population that consist of your every day laborers putting political pressure on our leaders for policies and acts that benefit them?The NC legislature did not just pull this out of their ass as some part of a liberal socialist conspiracy. We pride ourselves on being a democracy right? If our citizens disagree with this than we need to let our congressman know and/or not re-elect them. Otherwise Uncle Moneybags big bank CEO is out of luck that the majority of american people feel that today's modern society should provide for its people adequate sick leave than they are SOL. If all the fear mongering you prescribe really has the negative results you predict; than as unemployment rises and citizen wealth decreases popular opinion will change.
2/19/2009 9:38:44 PM
^x13 Scroll backup and reread pooljobs post, then move on. This thread has already peaked, the rest is all downhill.Its just another socialist bill that sounds good on paper but never so great in reality. People will abuse this system guaranteed. Hell you don't even have to be sick to get paid. Just say your taking care of your wife or child or friend. Actually you don't have to tell anyone shit unless your taking off more than three days at a time. Here is what is going to happen if the bill is passed, speaking very generally. Businesses will be the first to feel the effect. Their liabilities will increase, there is no debating this. Eventually they will offset this initial increase in liabilities by either hiring less people, lowering salaries or raising prices to compensate. All this cockamy socialist BS always trickles down to the working man. On the bright side, I will never have to worry about anyone cooking my Little Thick Burger with a stuffy nose ever again though. [Edited on February 19, 2009 at 11:09 PM. Reason : -]
2/19/2009 11:05:14 PM
Employment should be a contract between the employer and employee. If the employer does not want to give certain benefits to the employee, they should not be forced to do so. The government has no place in this contract between individuals.
2/19/2009 11:28:56 PM
^^ i think its more of a populist thing, i don't think its very socialist^ i kind of disagree, i think the government has an interest in protecting the well being of citizens and employees I just think this is really overstepping that role and will have a negative result
2/19/2009 11:49:27 PM