With Mandatory Paid Leave Gaining Ground, Is It Time to Do Away With Your PTO and Go Back to a Sick/Vacation Time Off Program?
Speaker: Robert B McKenzie
Speaker Designation: President, McKenzieHr
Speaker: Robert B McKenzie
Speaker Designation: President, McKenzieHr
Eighteen states and the District of Columbia now require employers to provide paid sick leave to their employees. In addition, 27 municipalities require employees to receive paid sick leave.
As of January 1, 2024, Minnesota implemented a new statewide earned sick and safe time law, mandating that most employers in Minnesota offer paid sick and safe leave to their employees in the state. Additionally, California raised the minimum requirement for sick leave days from 24 hours per year to 40 hours.
Do you have a Federal Contract? If so, you are required to provide paid sick leave to your employees.
Do you have a contract with a municipality? If so, have you checked the fine print to see if the contract requires you to offer paid sick leave to your employees?
Every Law is Different
One thing to know is that every state and municipal law requiring mandatory paid sick leave is different. Trying to comply with all of them is causing much confusion. For example, Vermont requires paid sick leave to be offered after one year of service while others require it after 90 or 120 days. New York and Colorado require sick leave to be paid as it accrues. Most require you to offer paid sick leave to part-time employees. Others require it of all employees – even those who work on an on-call basis.
Is Your PTO Plan Obsolete?
PTO or a Paid Time Off program that combined vacation and sick leave into one bucket of time off was the trend for many years. With the passage of these laws, many organizations are doing away with their PTO as many states require payment of unused PTO upon termination. However, the same states do not require payment of unused sick leave. Organizations can maintain their PTO Plans, but at what cost?
In this webinar, we will be reviewing mandatory paid sick leave laws in place now, review many of the differences, and go over how to transition from a Sick/Vacation policy to a PTO policy as well as making the transition from a PTO plan to a Sick/Vacation plan.
With the above-described legislation, changes must be made to time off policies in those areas in which you have employees. Multi-State employers need to know what the compliance requirements are. Since each state and municipality have different rules for accrual and use of sick leave, compliance is difficult.
Under the mandatory paid sick leave, abuse can become a huge problem. How will your organization deal with it?
As organizations across the United States navigate the complexities of paid leave policies, the debate over PTO versus separate sick and vacation time off programs continues to evolve. By carefully evaluating the needs and preferences of their workforce and considering the broader implications for employee health, productivity, and compliance, American organizations can determine the most effective approach to managing paid time off in today's dynamic work environment.
Bob McKenzie, has over 40 years of human resources management experience. His background includes a wide range of hands-on experience in all areas of Human resources management in all types of industries within the public and private sectors.
Bob has been cited in a number of Human Resources trade publications. Among them are HR.com, HR Magazine, HR Florida Review, Vault.com, BNA and the Institute of Management and administration and the Business Journal. He has been a speaker at a number of conferences as well as audio and web-based seminars.
Bob is a graduate of Rider University where he received a Bachelor of Science in Commerce Degree and double majored in Industrial Relations and Organizational Behavior.