Yet this bill has real costs too, and ironically it is those same economically-vulnerable individuals who will also bear the brunt of the provision's costs.
Businesses must consider the entire costs associated with that employee. That includes the taxes they pay related to that employee, overhead costs, and the total costs of benefits. As benefit costs go up, employers will have to compensate elsewhere. Because lower-income and part-time workers currently are less likely to have this type of leave, it's their employment costs that will go up as a result of this mandate.
Employers will find ways to compensate. They may reduce those employees' take-home pay or seek ways to cut jobs. For example, some businesses may combine part-time jobs or seek to replace low-wage workers with more productive high-wage workers. Others may look to outsource jobs entirely. That's bad news for the millions of unemployed workers who seek jobs today, and also for the many women who crave part-time opportunities that allow them to better balance their desire for work and time with children.
Businesses would also face new administrative costs as a result of a new paid sick leave mandate. Small business, which are less likely to offer paid benefits and have less human resource capacity, will be particularly affect by the challenge of administering the new benefit, particularly policing something as vague as leave taken for someone who's the "equivalent" of a family member. That's another reason for businesses to look for ways to have fewer staff, and therefore few headaches, in-house.
These are factors that tend to be shortchanged in public policy debates. The media is particularly prone to one-side analysis: on an issue like family leave, producers showcase sympathetic workers who have struggled without paid leave and will benefit from the new government mandate. There's no interview with the equally sympathetic, but harder to identify, would-be worker who has been priced out of the workforce because of government mandates.
The public needs to consider all the consequences of legislation, whether it's a bill to create new employment mandates or to increase government's control of our health care system. Once people are aware of both sides of the equation, they will likely come to realize that the benefits are not worth the costs.