On March 18, 2020 Governor Cuomo signed legislation implementing COVID-19 emergency sick leave benefits for New York employees that remain in effect through any COVID-19 mandatory isolation or quarantine order by the State, New York State Department of Health, local Board of Health, or other authorized government. On April 3, 2020 Governor Cuomo signed legislation amending New York labor law (the "Act") to create a statewide sick leave benefit, unrelated to COVID-19, that will take effect January 1, 2021.
Key features of the New York sick leave benefit include:
All employers in New York will be subject to the Act. An employer’s size determines the minimum number of sick leave hours that must be provided and is based on the number of employees each calendar year measured from January 1 through December 31. Any collective bargaining agreement entered into on or after the effective date of the Act must provide at least comparable sick time benefits to its members.
The minimum amount of sick time that must be made available to employees beginning January 1, 2021 is as follows:
Employer Size | Hours of Sick Time Per Calendar Year |
---|---|
Less than 5 employees |
40 hours unpaid |
Less than 5 employees and net income greater than $1 million in prior tax year |
40 hours paid |
5 to 99 employees |
40 hours paid |
100 or more employees |
56 hours paid |
For benefit purposes, an employer may use the calendar year or establish any consecutive twelve-month period.
Employers may establish a reasonable minimum increment for the use of sick leave not to exceed four hours. While on sick leave, employees will be paid their regular compensation or the applicable minimum wage, whichever is greater. Any unused sick time may be carried over to the following calendar year; however, an employer is not obligated to provide more paid sick time per calendar year than indicated above (i.e., 40 or 56 hours depending on employer size) or to compensate an employee for any unused sick time upon termination of employment.
Employers with sick or time off policies that meet or exceed the state sick leave provisions are not required to provide any additional sick leave pursuant to the Act. Employers must maintain payroll and time-off records for a period of six years.
The Act will not preempt a New York city (e.g., New York City) with a population of one million or more from enacting or enforcing municipal leave laws that meet or exceed the statewide sick leave provisions.
Employees will accrue at least 1 hour of sick leave for every 30 hours worked beginning on the employee’s date of hire or September 30, 2020, the effective date of the Act’s non-COVID-19 sick leave provisions. Alternatively, employers may credit the full annual amount of leave at the beginning of the calendar year.
Beginning January 1, 2021, employees may request leave verbally or in writing for their own or a family member’s:
Sick leave may be requested for an employee’s child, spouse, domestic partner, parent, sibling, grandchild, grandparent as well as the child or parent of an employee's spouse or domestic partner.
A parent includes a biological, foster, step or adoptive parent, legal guardian or a person who stood in loco parentis when the employee was a minor child. Employees may take sick leave to care for a biological, adopted, or foster child as well as a legal ward or a child of an employee standing in loco parentis.
Upon request by an employee, an employer must provide the employee with a summary of the amount of sick leave accrued and used in the current or prior calendar year. Employers may not retaliate against an employee for taking sick leave and must restore the employee to their same position, pay and at the same terms and conditions of employment prior to taking sick leave.
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