Paid-sick-day activists have a Valentine's Day message for Council

The Web site for the award-winning alternative weekly, the Philadelphia City Paper.

0 comments

Paid-sick-day activists have a Valentine's Day message for Council

POSTED: Thursday, February 14, 2013, 10:31 AM

Ah, love. It can be co-opted for so many causes. This morning, Philly paid-sick-day proponents are urging City Council to show some love to the paid-sick-day legislation introduced by Councilman Bill Greenlee. 

Philadelphia Coalition for Healthy Family and Workplaces and PathWays PA organized the delivery of postcards, letters and petitions to City Council offices at 11 a.m. today. Per the press release: "On Valentine’s Day, Philadelphians will show their love for the Healthy Families and Workplaces Bill, which currently awaits a hearing in City Council.  Many Philadelphians, including constituents of Councilman Mark Squilla and Councilman Bobby Henon, will visit City Hall to hand deliver over one thousand signed letters, postcards, and petition signatures urging support and passage of earned sick days. In Philadelphia, about 200,000 workers do not currently have access to paid sick time and are forced to work sick or risk their wages or jobs to take time off when they or their families are ill."

Advocates claim 200,000 Philadelphians don't have paid sick days, and cite this study, to describe this as a public health and economic issue that, left unaddressed, has negative implications for both employers and workers.

Posted by Samantha Melamed @ 10:31 AM  Permalink | Post a comment
0 comments
Comments  (0)


About this blog
Here at The Naked City, you'll find breaking news, analysis, gossip and surprises about everything from crime and politics to the beating pulse of city life itself. We're good listeners, too:

Daniel Denvir: daniel.denvir@citypaper.net

Ryan Briggs: ryan.briggs@citypaper.net

Samantha Melamed: samantha@citypaper.net

The Naked City on Twitter: @CPNakedCity @danieldenvir @rw_briggs @samanthamelamed

Topics:
Blog archives:
Past Archives: