Paid Sick Days
Fighting the Flu: Paid Sick Leave Reduces Infection Rates – Newswise

Paid Sick Leave Benefits Help Alleviate Worker Financial Stress – Bloomberg

“When you don’t have leave, a day off of work can mean eight hours with no wages, and make someone’s job vulnerable,” LeaAnne DeRigne, an associate professor at Florida Atlantic University’s Phyllis and Harvey Sandler School of Social Work, told Bloomberg Law. “If you can be in trouble for taking a paid sick day,” and it puts your job in jeopardy, “then you’re really in a scary and insecure financial situation.”

Fighting the Flu: Paid Sick Leave Reduces Infection Rates – Newswise

Opinion: Healthy workers will keep the Michigan economy growing – Traverse City Record-Eagle

[M]y brothers and sisters and I carry on my father’s vision of a business rooted in community, which to us means caring for those that help the community grow and thrive. That’s why we strongly support the recently-passed legislation giving Michigan workers the opportunity to earn paid sick time, so Michiganders can take a short time away from work to recover from an illness or care for a sick family member without disrupting their household’s budget or the fear of losing their job.

Fighting the Flu: Paid Sick Leave Reduces Infection Rates – Newswise

The #MeToo Workplace Policy That No One Is Talking About – The New Republic

“If you miss your court hearing, then you don’t get your protective order,” said [Marium] Durrani, who, before she joined the National Network to End Domestic Violence, was a lawyer representing victims of domestic violence in court. “Or you miss your job and your employer finds grounds to terminate you, and you probably don’t have resources to combat that. Beyond the physical and emotional implications of abuse, there are these long reaching ramifications.”

Fighting the Flu: Paid Sick Leave Reduces Infection Rates – Newswise

The Legislature needs to get out of the way on paid sick days – Penn Live

[The Pennsylvania Health Action Network] sees many people each year who, though insured, cite barriers to getting care, including difficulty getting paid time off from employers to see their doctors when they are ill. This is a public health crisis, and it’s one that is disproportionately affecting women, African American and Latino workers, all of whom are overrepresented among low-wage workers and among part-time workers.