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		Advocacy groups push for expansive paid family, medical leave in 
		Illinois
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		[February 10, 2023]  
		By HANNAH MEISELCapitol News Illinois
 hmeisel@capitolnewsillinois.com
 
 
  SPRINGFIELD – A coalition of advocacy and labor groups is pushing for a 
		state law to give Illinois workers 26 weeks of paid leave if they need 
		to recover from an illness, domestic or sexual violence, or take care of 
		a sick family member or new child. 
 The same groups just celebrated a legislative victory last month with 
		the passage of five days of paid leave – negotiations that took four 
		years but were ultimately agreed to by the state’s most influential 
		business groups and even garnered some Republican votes.
 
 After a quick rebrand to the Illinois Time To Care Coalition, advocates 
		are pushing for a more ambitious leave policy, which would make Illinois 
		the 12th state with mandatory paid family and medical leave. The United 
		States is the only industrialized nation without a national paid 
		parental leave law, while dozens of developing countries also have such 
		policies.
 
		“No one should have to choose a paycheck over their health and the 
		health of their family,” said Wendy Pollack, Women’s Law and Policy 
		Initiative director at the Chicago-based Shriver Center on Poverty Law. 
		
		 
		The coalition’s initial proposal – encapsulated in Senate Bill 1234 and 
		House Bill 1530 – would cover all employers in Illinois and all 
		employees who earn at least $1,600 annually. Paid leave would also apply 
		to contract workers.
 The benefits to workers would be paid out of a newly created special 
		state fund. The law would require employers to pay 0.73 percent of the 
		wages for their employees and contractors into the Family and Medical 
		Leave Insurance Fund, similar to the state’s Unemployment Insurance 
		Trust Fund. An additional fee of up to 0.05 percent could be imposed 
		through administrative rules for administering the program.
 
 Those who need paid leave would need to provide documentation of 
		pregnancy, adoption or guardianship of a new child, their own injury or 
		illness, or that of a sick family member. The leave policy would also 
		cover military-related time off and time needed to recover from sexual 
		assault or domestic violence.
 
 Those workers, if approved for leave, would receive 90 percent of their 
		average weekly wages for their leave period, up to a maximum of $1,200 
		per week. Eventually that maximum would be adjusted to 90 percent of the 
		average weekly wage in Illinois.
 
 Those potential payouts are in line with the policies of the 11 other 
		states with paid leave laws, although no other state’s law is quite as 
		permissive as the proposal being pushed in Illinois. For example, 
		although Massachusetts allows for up to 26 weeks of total paid leave in 
		one year, it provides for only 12 weeks of paid leave for new parents 
		and those caring for a sick family member, and 20 weeks for those who 
		can’t work due to a long-term illness.
 
 But advocates pushing for paid leave in Illinois are aiming for loftier 
		goals than the programs in other states.
 
		
		 
		[to top of second column] | 
            
			 
            Eleven states already have some form of 
			paid family and medical leave, including Washington, D.C. A new 
			proposal in the General Assembly will make Illinois the 12th. 
			(Capitol News Illinois graphic by Nika Schoonover via datawrapper.de) 
            
			 
		Christina Green, who now works for Chicago-based advocacy organization 
		Women Employed, was only eligible for two weeks of leave when she gave 
		birth to her son in 2020. She would only have had access to 12 weeks of 
		paid maternity leave at the private school she worked at if she had been 
		employed for seven or more years. 
		Instead of returning to work after those two weeks, Green said she 
		drained her savings in order to take the 12 weeks she anticipated 
		needing. And even then, Green said it wasn’t enough.
 “It actually took me around 20 weeks to fully heal,” Green said. 
		“Unfortunately I had no other options but to return to work…I literally 
		budgeted down to the last dollar.”
 
 Angelica Arreguin, a single mom and temp agency worker who organizes 
		with the Chicago Workers Collaborative, shared through an interpreter 
		that she was fired by her former employer when she couldn’t return to 
		her job because her “injury did not heal on their schedule.”
 
 “And if there comes a day that my children become ill and I need to 
		leave work for a month, I expect to be fired instead of being allowed to 
		return,” Arreguin said.
 
 Advocates say paid parental leave would help ease the racial inequities 
		suffered by women like Arreguin and Green, who is Black. The advocacy 
		groups behind the proposal point to a permanent decrease in earnings for 
		women who take time off to care for children or aging parents – an issue 
		set to become more prominent as Baby Boomers age into needing more 
		medical care over the next decade or so.
 
 The coalition is also selling paid leave as a boon for businesses, 
		especially in a labor market where many employers have found it 
		difficult to find or re-hire workers in the wake of COVID-19.
 
		
		 
		House sponsor state Rep. Sonya Harper, D-Chicago, said lack of a safety 
		net is preventing many women from re-entering the workforce.
 “If women in Illinois participated in the labor force at the same rate 
		as women in countries with paid leave, there would be an estimated 
		124,000 additional workers in the state and 4.4 billion more wages,” she 
		said.
 
 But business groups aren’t engaging with the proposal yet. Rob Karr, 
		President and CEO of the influential Illinois Retail Merchants 
		Association, turned the focus back to last month’s legislative agreement 
		on five days of paid leave.
 
 “Our focus is on the proper implementation of the historic paid leave 
		bill that just passed the General Assembly and has yet to even be signed 
		into law by the governor,” Karr said in a statement.
 
		
		Capitol News Illinois is a nonprofit, nonpartisan news 
		service covering state government. It is distributed to more than 400 
		newspapers statewide, as well as hundreds of radio and TV stations. It 
		is funded primarily by the Illinois Press Foundation and the Robert R. 
		McCormick Foundation. |