Here, from abetterbalance.org, are some facts about sick leave:
- Only 20% of the lowest-paid decile of private-sector workers have access to paid sick leave, compared to 87% of workers in the top-paid decile.9
- Forty-three percent of working mothers—including 54% of Latina mothers and 42% of Black mothers—do not have access to paid sick leave.10
- Only 49% of Hispanic workers have paid sick leave, compared with 61% of the general population.11
- Overall, workers with high levels of public contact (e.g., those working in the restaurant/service industry, child care professionals) are less likely to have access to paid sick leave.12
- 55% of retail and fast-food workers do not have access to paid sick leave.13
- Temporary access to paid sick leave in 2020 led to a decrease in 400 COVID-19 cases per day per state without existing paid sick leave requirements during the height of the pandemic.14
- Even before the pandemic, states with paid sick leave requirements saw a 40% decrease in influenza rates.15
- Paid sick leave reduces worker turnover,16 which results in significant savings for employers. Replacing workers can cost a business the equivalent of 21% of an employee’s annual wage.17
- Paid sick leave leads to fewer workers coming to work with illnesses and health conditions that reduce their productivity—a problem that costs the national economy $207.6 billion per year.18
- Nationally, universal paid sick leave would result in $1.1 billion in annual savings in hospital emergency department costs, including more than $500 million in savings to publicly funded health insurance programs such as Medicare, Medicaid, and SCHIP.19
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