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Business Leaders Make the Case for Paid Sick Days

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Leaders in the small business community are increasingly voicing their support for paid sick days. A new brochure captures their voices making the case for this measure as a way to keep down costs, retain employees, and strengthen the economy.

โ€œWe donโ€™t see a conflict between doing the right thing and earning a profit,โ€ said Rob Everts, co-president and CEO of Equal Exchange, a fair trade provider of coffee and other products, based in West Bridgewater, Massachusetts. โ€œWe value our workers for the skills that they bring and at the same time recognize that they are human beings with human needs.โ€

Dewetta Logan, director and Owner of Smart Beginnings Early Learning Center in Philadelphia, says implementing paid sick days at her center โ€œhelped build a partnership of trust between employee and employer.โ€ Logan also believes that businesses like hers have a moral obligation to treat their workers humanely. โ€œI believe having time off when youโ€™re sick is a right โ€“ not something a worker should have to beg for.โ€

The fight against paid sick days is led by lobbyists for trade associations dominated by big national chains. โ€œThey disguise themselves as mom and pop shops. But they donโ€™t speak for me,โ€ said Freddy Castiblanco, owner of Terraza 7 Live Music, a cafe and music venue in Elmhurst, NY.

The brochure, titled, โ€œHow Your Business Can Benefit from Paid Sick Days,โ€ is made available by Family Values @ Work Consortium and the Main Street Alliance and can be accessed here.

 

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