New York State has joined the growing list of states and localities (including New York City and Westchester County) mandating that employers provide paid sick leave to employees.

The new obligation is separate and distinct from the New York State Quarantine Leave Law enacted in response to COVID-19.

The statewide sick leave law applies to all employers with employees in the state.  The law goes into effect on September 30, 2020 when employers must allow employees to start accruing paid sick leave, but employers are not obligated to allow use of sick leave until January 1, 2021.

Similar to the New York Quarantine Leave Law, the amount of paid sick leave an employer must provide an employee varies based on an employer’s size. Employers with 100 or more employees must provide 56 hours of paid sick leave per calendar year. Employers with fewer than 100 employees must provide 40 hours of paid sick leave; except employers with less than 5 employees, and a net income of less than $1 million, can provide 40 hours of unpaid time.  The law does not specifically address whether multistate employers should count employees outside of New York in determining an employer’s size.

For more details on the new New York Paid Sick Leave law see https://www.jacksonlewis.com/publication/new-york-budget-includes-changes-state-employment-laws

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Photo of Jenifer M. Bologna Jenifer M. Bologna

Jenifer Bologna is a principal in the White Plains, New York, office of Jackson Lewis P.C. She focuses much of her practice on assisting multi-state employers with compliance solutions, developing policies and practices that are lawful in all of the jurisdictions in which…

Jenifer Bologna is a principal in the White Plains, New York, office of Jackson Lewis P.C. She focuses much of her practice on assisting multi-state employers with compliance solutions, developing policies and practices that are lawful in all of the jurisdictions in which they operate.

Jenifer specializes in preventative advice and counsel on a nation-wide basis, regularly advising clients on multi-state employment law issues to address an increasingly remote and hybrid workforce. In addition, she supports employers in navigating the complex and growing body of federal, state and local leave, accommodation and benefit laws that impact an employer’s response to employees who are injured or ill, have family care responsibilities or need time to bond with children.

Jenifer’s extensive counseling experience allows her to provide nuanced advice that helps employers effectively respond to the legal and business challenges posed by the varying array of workplace employment laws. Utilizing creative legal strategies and practical advice, she guides clients through these complex issues that often demand individualized solutions.

Jenifer’s goal is to minimize her clients’ litigation risk by working with them to implement preventative strategies and constructive solutions. As such, she regularly assists employers with policy and process development or improvement, including absence management and accommodation protocols and multi-state employment policies. Understanding there is no one-size-fits-all approach, Jenifer works with clients to develop an employment law compliance strategy that best fits their specific needs.

In addition to advice and counsel, Jenifer frequently speaks on disability and absence management issues and employment law compliance, including regularly conducting workplace training on these topics.