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Communities need paid sick days to keep people healthy, to help workers stay employed, to boost the economy. But as a Halloween rally in Portland demonstrated, being able to earn paid said days is also an issue of equity.
Nearly 60 Latino workers and family members came to City Hall to support a measure that will ensure Portlanders can earn paid sick days. The rally was organized by Causa Oregon and Vecinos en Alerta.
As Francisco Lopez, Executive Director of Causa Oregon, put it, “At a time when families’ finances are stretched and unemployment is high, no worker should lose critical income or risk being fired when they take time off to recover or care for a sick loved one.”
A new fact sheet from The Everybody Benefits – Portland’s Campaign for Earned Sick Days coalition lays out the disparities in the Portland area.
One woman shared a typical family’s situation with commissioners. Her husband has worked for the same employer for 15 years yet has never been allowed to earn a paid sick day to care for his own or his family’s health. She described the significant financial challenges that this creates for her family – and his fear of losing his job over just a cold or flu.
Members of other racial justice groups – Center for Intercultural Organizing, the Urban League, and Asian Pacific American Network of Oregon – expressed their support for an earned sick days measure. Leaders called on Portland’s city commissioners to take this small step with big results toward a more equitable and healthy local economy, by solving this community problem now.