Posted in Employment Law
New cannabis businesses face a myriad of challenges.
The state of Washington’s fragmented and expanding approach to minimum wage and
paid leave is only becoming more difficult. Law and legislation in this
area already impacts cannabis businesses in Seattle, Tacoma and Spokane, and
may soon affect all cannabis businesses statewide.
As of this update written on March 7,
2016, the Legislature appears unlikely to pass a measure that addresses
statewide minimum wage or paid sick and safe leave. These issues are,
however, far from over. On March 5, labor-backed Raise Up Washington
kicked off its campaign to qualify Initiative Measure No. 1433 for the November
2016 ballot. Now is a good time to take stock of your existing local paid
leave obligations and consider the paid leave and minimum wage requirements
that would be imposed statewide if I-1433 were approved.
If you conduct business in Seattle,
Tacoma, or Spokane local law already requires (or will soon require) paid sick
and safe leave for many employees working in those cities. Although these
local laws are detailed, the basic obligations are as follows:
These laws differ in a number of important ways –
including accrual rate, accrual caps, use caps, carry over, minimum increments
of leave, the benefit “year,” treatment of “occasional” employees, exemptions
of certain employees, rehire requirements, and applicability to bereavement
leave. Uniformity across more than one location is challenging.
In December 2015, Seattle significantly
amended all of its labor standards ordinances, including paid sick and safe
leave. These amendments strengthen penalties, allow civil suits by
employees, and establish a rebuttable presumption that an adverse action within
90 days of an employee exercising his or her rights is retaliation.
If you have employees who work in
Seattle only occasionally, the rules for “occasional basis” employees have also
changed. If such employees work 240 hours in Seattle during a benefit
year, they will now accrue paid leave for those first 240 hours as well as for
future Seattle hours. They will also now be considered covered by Seattle
paid leave for the duration of their future employment.
If your payroll system allows for leave
to be accounted for in 15-minute increments, you must do so for non-exempt
employees who use paid leave, which may also require reevaluation of the
minimum increment used to track FMLA leave.
Seattle employers may now choose any
12-month benefit year to administer paid leave, not just the calendar
year. The amendments impose a number of other administrative
requirements, including keeping paid leave records for three years and
providing a written policy notice to employees by April 1, 2016. If you
are a Seattle employer you should review your policies and practices in light
of these amendments.
Initiative 1433, if ballot qualified and
approved in November, would not supersede these local rules (unless they are
less favorable to employees) and would not, therefore, bring statewide
uniformity. It would, however, create minimum statewide paid sick and
safe leave while increasing the minimum wage to $13.50 by 2020.
Under I-1433, employers of all sizes
would be required to provide at least one hour of paid leave for every 40 hours
worked, with no cap on accrual or use in a year, and only a 90-day allowed
waiting period. The initiative would require at least 40 hours to be
carried over at year-end. These minimum requirements would change at
least one element of any paid leave program developed under the local
laws. The Initiative would also require reinstatement of unused leave and
eligibility after periods of separation of 12 months or less, longer than
required under local law and long enough to capture repeat seasonal workers.
The minimum wage increases mandated by
I-1433 would be phased in over four years, but would not displace higher
minimum wages in local jurisdictions.
With no competing legislation or
referendum waiting likely to be approved, it is possible that greater minimum
wage and paid sick and safe leave requirements will be coming to Washington
soon, without any significant improvement on the fragmentation caused by local
laws.
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