Text Size:   A   A   A

Posted: Wednesday, 04 November 2009 9:42AM

Proposed Law Would Require Pay For Sick Workers



WASHINGTON (Reuters) - U.S. employers who tell workers to stay home when they are sick will have to give them paid time off for up to five days under new federal legislation proposed on Tuesday.

The emergency law would cover pandemic H1N1 flu or any other infectious disease, said California Representative George Miller, a Democrat who chairs the House Education and Labor Committee and who introduced the bill.

"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.

"This will not only protect employees, but it will save employers money by ensuring that sick employees don't spread infection to co-workers and customers, and will relieve the financial burden on our health system swamped by those suffering from H1N1."

The U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention advises employers to encourage sick workers to stay home so they do not spread H1N1. "But workers have been reporting that many of them are either afraid or cannot afford to take time off," Miller told reporters in a telephone briefing.

Paid sick leave is not required by U.S. laws.

Miller said the committee would hold a hearing the week of November 16 and he would press to have a full vote as soon as possible.

Miller said at least 50 million American workers are not paid for time taken off sick, "many in lower-wage jobs that have direct contact with the public such as the food-service and hospitality industry, schools and health care fields."

MORE VACCINE READY

In a regular briefing, CDC director Dr. Thomas Frieden said 31.8 million doses of flu vaccine have now become available -- still far short of the minimum of 80 million to 100 million that had been projected for the first week of November.

This number includes vaccine already administered. Frieden said CDC hoped 10 million new doses will have been made available by the end of the week.

He said the pandemic may be having an unexpected side-effect -- increasing demand for the seasonal influenza vaccine. "We think this year will be the highest ever uptake on seasonal flu vaccine," Frieden said.

"We anticipate there being around 114 million doses of seasonal flu vaccine available through the market by the end of the year. It may be there is even greater demand than that by the end of the season."

This includes healthcare workers, who are often reluctant to be vaccinated. In recent years, only around 38 to 40 percent of healthcare workers get flu vaccines, but that percentage may be higher this year, Frieden said.

As with the vaccine against H1N1 swine flu, distribution is slow and patchy for seasonal flu vaccine. "We continue to hear that people are unable to get the vaccine," Frieden said.

The United States buys both seasonal and H1N1 vaccine from five makers -- GlaxoSmithKline Plc, AstraZeneca Plc's MedImmune unit, Novartis, Sanofi-Aventis and CSL Limited.

Some members of Congress and media commentators complained that detainees at Guantanamo Bay -- the U.S. base in Cuba -- would receive H1N1 vaccines when Americans were still struggling to find them.

But White House spokesman Robert Gibbs denied this on Tuesday. "There is no vaccine in Guantanamo and there's no vaccine on the way to Guantanamo," he told reporters.

Article Copyright World Entertainment News Network 2009 http://www.wenn.com/ Photo(s) Copyright Getty Images 2009.

Court Rules Again Against Vaccine-Autism Claims


Vaccines that contain a mercury-based preservative called thimerosal cannot cause autism on their own, a special U.S. court ruled on Friday.

No Explanation Yet For Prius California Claim


Safety investigators have found no evidence so far to support or disprove a California motorist's claim his Toyota Prius sped out of control on its own.

States Tap Stimulus As More Families Seek Aid


Many states have used funds from the $863 billion economic stimulus plan to help give a rising number of poor families emergency cash assistance.

Farm Groups Call On U.S. To 'Bust Up Big Ag'


A coalition of family farmers, consumers and other critics of corporate agriculture on Thursday called on the government to crack down 'big ag.'

Toyota Discounts Boost Sales


Unprecedented discounts after a series of damaging recalls boosted Toyota's sales in early March, as regulators weighed new auto safety measures.

New York's "Ground Zero" Workers Reach Deal On Claims


Thousands of workers who suffered health problems after the September 11 attacks in 2001 have reached a settlement worth up to $657.5 million.

Poll: More Americans Say Global Warming Exaggerated


A growing number of Americans, nearly half the country, think global warming worries are exaggerated.

Children Turn To Inhaling To Het High


More 12-year-olds in the United States admit to using potentially deadly inhalants to get high than have used other drugs.

Chef, Restaurant Charged With Serving Endangered Whale


A California sushi chef and the restaurant in which he worked have been charged with illegally serving meat from an endangered Sei whale.

Another Runaway Toyota Prius Reported


Federal regulators said they were looking into a report of another runaway Toyota Prius, this one in Westchester County, New York.

"JihadJane" Accused Of Terror Plot In Sweden


A Pennsylvania woman has been charged with plotting to kill a Swedish man and trying to recruit fighters via the Internet.

Toyota, U.S. Officials Investigate Runaway Prius


Safety regulators and Toyota dispatched teams on Tuesday to inspect a Prius that sped out of control on a California freeway a day earlier.

Economists Trim 2011 U.S. Growth Forecast


Economists raised their forecast for economic growth in 2010 in March, the third straight monthly rise, while trimming their growth forecast for 2011.

9/11 Suspects Should Face Civilian Court, U.N. Envoys Say


Human rights investigators called on the Obama administration to prosecute the accused September 11 masterminds in a civilian court.

Tax Soda, Pizza To Cut Obesity, Researchers Say


Researchers estimate that an 18 percent tax on pizza and soda can push down U.S. adults' calorie intake enough to lower their weight.
KGMI News/Talk 790 on Facebook
Shop Sunset Square!
Ad Image