Queers
For Economic Justice Asks Quinn To Support Paid Sick Days Now!
By
Amber Hollibaugh and Brandon Lacy Campos
While
many in the LGBTQ community take paid sick days for granted, half of
all workers in New York City — and two-thirds of low-wage workers —
get no paid sick time. Many of these workers are LGBTQ. These
workers don't have the luxury of putting their health first.
When they get sick, instead of focusing on getting better, they are
forced to choose between going to work sick to make rent at the end
of the month or sacrificing their days’ wages and/or getting
fired. No one should be forced to make this choice.
Last
week, Queers
for Economic Justice
returned from the International
AIDS Conference
to New York City, where a debate over whether employers should be
required to give their workers paid sick days has become a leading
issue in City Hall and in
the media.
Lack of paid sick days is a significant problem for New Yorkers
living and working with HIV/AIDS, who don’t have the privilege of
taking sickness lightly, and must prioritize their health above all
else when sick. This could mean staying home in bed to get
needed rest or scheduling an emergency visit to the doctor’s
office. Without the ability to take paid sick time, the health and
economic security of people living with HIV/AIDS are jeopardized.
There
is legislation
pending in the NYC Council
that would alleviate this problem by requiring most businesses to
give a modest number of paid sick days to their workers to use for
themselves or to care for a sick family member.
The
legislation enjoys broad
public support
as well as a veto-proof majority of support in the City Council.
If passed, the legislation would lift a serious burden off the nearly
1.5 million workers in NYC who currently don’t get a single paid
sick day. This
is especially true for immigrant workers, people of color, and people
with low-wage jobs, who are among the least likely to get paid sick
days.
Paid
sick days also play an important public health role. When sick
workers go to work, they increase the spread of illness. Nobody
wants to be served by a sick waiter at a restaurant. For people
living with HIV/AIDS, the risk of complications from influenza and
other communicable illnesses make the public health importance of
paid sick days particularly vital.
Considering
how important this issue is to LGBTQ workers and our brothers and
sisters living with HIV/AIDS, it’s disturbing that some of the most
prominent and powerful opponents of the legislation come from within
the LGBTQ community.
The
openly gay Speaker of the City Council, Christine Quinn, is the
single person standing in the way of the legislation’s passage.
If she allowed the bill to the floor for a vote, it would fly through
the City Council.
Backing
Speaker Quinn is Tony Juliano, the general manager of the gay bar XES
Lounge in Chelsea, who recently claimed that despite considering his
workers to be family, he opposes giving them five paid sick days per
year. Almost
ninety percent of restaurant and bar workers
don’t
get paid sick days – most go to work sick for fear of losing their
jobs, and
many actually do lose their jobs when they call in sick.
At
Queers for Economic Justice, we have an initiative called Poverty and
HIV/AIDS Stop Together. Through this project, we are highlighting how
issues like paid sick days connect anti-poverty work and HIV/AIDS
Activism. We are also launching a Queer Survival Economics
initiative, which seeks to make visible the impact of the recession
on LGBTQ communities. In today’s economy, workers are struggling to
stay employed and provide for those closest to them, and they need
paid sick days more than ever.
It’s
time for the LGBTQ community to come together to support this safe,
sane, and sensible policy.
Amber
Hollibaugh and Brandon Lacy Campos are Co-Directors of Queers for
Economic Justice.
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