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The Earned Sick Time Act (“ESTA”) was set to go into effect at midnight, February 21. In a last-minute legislative compromise, the House and Senate passed amendments to the ESTA with less than an hour to spare before the effective date.
The amended ESTA keeps much of the originally enacted law intact:
But there are major changes:
As originally drafted, the ESTA did not obviously allow employers to frontload time to employees at the beginning of a year (even though the enforcing agency was approving of it). The amended ESTA provides that at the beginning of a year, in lieu of tracking accruals, small employers may frontload at least 40 hours of paid sick time and all other employers may frontload at least 72 hours of sick time.
If an employer elects to frontload time, they are not required to track accruals at all, are not required to permit a carryover from year to year, and may (but do not have to) pay out unused time at the end of a year. The amendments clarify that employers may prorate the frontloaded amount for part-time employees based on an estimate of how many hours those part-timers will work in a year, and require additional accrual if those part-timers work more than anticipated.
In contrast to the original ESTA, the amendments allow for limits on annual carryover of hours. Employers that choose to use the accrual method rather than frontloading can cap annual carryover at the 40 or 72 (or more) hours mark. For employers who frontload, there is no requirement to permit or limit/prohibit annual carryover.
Frequently seen as a benefit to employees who appreciate the extra pay at the end of the year, the original ESTA did not permit any payout or buying back of unused sick time at the end of a year. The amendments imply that an employer may pay out accrued but unused ESTA time in excess of the 40 or 72 hours at the end of the year for accruing employees and may pay out any amount (or not at all) for frontloaded employees.
Although there is no total carveout for seasonal employees, the amended ESTA makes two major changes that will functionally eliminate ESTA benefits for many seasonal employees.
The amended ESTA does not apply to employees who set their own schedule and who cannot be punished for failing to work a certain number of hours. The amendments say that these facts must be established in a written policy in order to exclude the employees in question.
Although ambiguously implied in the original ESTA, the amendments clarify that sick time is paid out at the employee’s base wage – without factoring in additional forms of compensation like tips, bonuses, commissions, overtime, and other supplemental pay. In no case can that be less than the State’s minimum wage.
One of the major frustrations under the original ESTA was the inability to have reasonable call-in procedures for use of sick time. Under the amendments, foreseeable absences stay at the 7 days’ notice seen previously. However, the amendments allow an employer to adopt a written policy that details call in procedures to manage unforeseeable sick time; the key is that employees are never required to give notice before they become aware they need the leave. In other words, employers can require reasonable notice of sudden sick time, but cannot require it before a shift unless the employee knew they would need it before the shift started.
The amended ESTA unfortunately does not change the restriction of waiting more than three consecutive missed shifts before requesting documentation to legitimize the use of sick time. However, it does now set a time limit of 15 days for an employee to provide an employer with properly requested documentation. Keep in mind, though, documentation is still entirely at the employer’s expense!
The amended ESTA removes the automatic presumption that the employer must be retaliating against employees who were disciplined or terminated within 90 days of exercising certain ESTA rights. That automatic presumption no longer applies, and the State is no longer expected to take a “guilty until proven innocent” approach to complaints. Importantly, the amended ESTA also removes an employee’s right to take an ESTA complaint directly to court. Instead, employees must file complaints with the State, and only the State can go to court on behalf of the employee.
Although the amended ESTA does not address all areas of concern for Michigan employers, it takes meaningful steps to allow employers to craft sick time policies that fit their operations and their employees. The amended ESTA technically went into effect at 12:02AM on February 21. As of this writing, the amended ESTA is already the law! The employment law experts at Fahey Schultz Burzych Rhodes PLC are at the ready to assist with any policy changes brought on by the last-minute amendments to the Earned Sick Time Act.
If you’d like to assess your organization’s ESTA compliance obligations, contact the labor and employment experts at Fahey Schultz Burzych Rhodes PLC – Lizzie Mills – hmills@fsbrlaw.com & Chad Karsten – ckarsten@fsbrlaw.com.
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