Under Biden order, workers refusing unsafe work could stay on
unemployment aid
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[February 01, 2021] By
Ann Saphir and Jonnelle Marte
(Reuters) - Many workers called back by
employers resuming or expanding operations despite the ongoing
coronavirus pandemic face a dilemma: return to jobs that put them at
high risk of the virus, or say no, and risk going without pay or
unemployment benefits.
President Joe Biden argues workers should not have to make that choice.
An executive order signed on his second full day in office could make it
easier for people to still qualify for jobless benefits if they quit or
refuse a job that puts them at undue risk of infection from the
coronavirus.
More than 18 million Americans are drawing some form of government
unemployment assistance.
The order asks the U.S. Department of Labor to clarify that workers who
refuse jobs due to unsafe working conditions can still receive
unemployment insurance. A department spokesman told Reuters the agency
is developing an Unemployment Insurance Program Letter - the usual
mechanism for issuing guidelines or clarifying policies - in response to
the order.
The Labor Department also issued new guidance on Friday with
recommendations on how employers can protect workers from the virus,
which has infected more than 25 million Americans and led to more than
433,500 U.S. deaths since the pandemic began.
"In a period where lots of people have lost jobs and people are
desperate for work, people will go and end up working under dangerous
conditions and they will do so believing they have no other
alternative," said Ken Jacobs, chair of the UC Berkeley Labor Center.
Assuring them they have the right to refuse unsafe work, and paying them
enough to afford not to work, is "vitally important," Jacobs said. "You
want people in the greatest risk groups to stay home."
SEEKING CLARITY
It's not clear how many workers have lost unemployment benefits after
refusing jobs because of COVID-19 safety concerns, said Andrew Stettner,
a senior fellow at The Century Foundation and an expert on unemployment
insurance. Still, the new guidance should establish minimum protections
for workers, replacing an approach that can vary by state, he said.
"It's been very unclear for a claimant to understand whether they can
refuse an offer to go back to work," Stettner said.
Currently some states, including Texas, publish lists of the
circumstances in which a worker might be able to keep receiving benefits
after turning down a job. For instance, the state offers exceptions for
workers age 65 and up, or those with health conditions that put them at
high risk.
But other states advise workers of a narrower set of protections, and
many make decisions on a case by case basis.
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Democratic U.S. presidential candidate Joe Biden talks with a worker
at the FCA (Fiat Chrysler Automobiles) Mack Assembly plant in
Detroit, Michigan, U.S., March 10, 2020. REUTERS/Brendan McDermid/File
Photo
"The goal would be to have some clear standards," Stettner said.
The new federal guidance, likely to be issued in the coming weeks, would be
aimed at making both states and workers aware they should be able to qualify for
unemployment benefits after refusing a job that puts them at greater risk
because of their age, a health condition or lack of COVID-19 safety protocols,
analysts say.
'WE NEED A STANDARD'
That policy could make a big difference for people in jobs at restaurants or
other businesses requiring workers to be in close proximity to others, two
recent studies suggest.
Essential workers were 55% more likely to get infected with coronavirus than
those who stayed at home, according to a study of the early months of the
pandemic in Pennsylvania published this week by researchers at Independence Blue
Cross and the Wharton School of Business.
"We all had a hunch that essential workers by the nature of their jobs are
probably more exposed, which means they're probably more likely to get infected
– but what we didn't know was by how much," said Wharton's Hummy Song, one of
the paper's authors.
A separate study out last week from the University of California found deaths of
working-age Californians increased by 22% in 2020 from what would have been
expected based on prior trends, and the deaths were concentrated in certain
occupations.
Deaths among workers in food and agriculture, for instance, were 39% higher.
Among healthcare workers, deaths were up 20%, the study noted.
The findings indicate there may be better protections in place in health care
settings than in restaurants or other fields, said Yea-Hung Chen, one of the
study's authors.
New guidance from the Biden administration could help workers in at least some
of those higher-risk sectors keep unemployment benefits and avoid unsafe work -
even as it puts pressure on companies to make workplaces safer, said University
of California, Berkeley professor Jesse Rothstein.
"We need a standard," said Rothstein. "The DOL has been AWOL for the last year."
(Reporting by Jonnelle Marte in New York and Ann Saphir in San Francisco;
Editing by Dan Burns and Diane Craft)
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