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New state law bars company retaliation against workers
ALBANY, N.Y. — A newly signed New York State law increases protections for employees from retaliatory actions by their employers in the case of reporting illegal or dangerous business activities. It “enhances protection” for private-sector employees, the office of Gov. Kathy Hochul said Oct. 28, the day she signed the legislation. The definition of employee […]
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ALBANY, N.Y. — A newly signed New York State law increases protections for employees from retaliatory actions by their employers in the case of reporting illegal or dangerous business activities.
It “enhances protection” for private-sector employees, the office of Gov. Kathy Hochul said Oct. 28, the day she signed the legislation. The definition of employee has been expanded to include former employees, protecting those who may have been retaliated against post-employment. The legislation goes on to widen the definition of retaliatory action, which will now include actions — or threats to take actions — that would “adversely impact” a former employee’s current or future employment. It also includes contacting — or threats to contact — immigration authorities about workers’ immigration status.
With the addition of covering former employees under this law, the statute of limitations was also extended to two years to ensure proper action can be taken in the case of retaliation.
“If we’ve learned anything from the pandemic, it’s that protecting workers must be part of our overall economic-recovery efforts,” Hochul contended. “This legislation ensures that employees can speak out on dangerous or illegal business practices that endanger their health and wellbeing. No worker should have to endure poor working conditions, so I’m proud to further protect working New Yorkers by preventing workplace retaliation.”
The law will protect employees whether they were acting within the scope of their job duties or not. It also ensures employees only must prove that they “reasonably believe” a violation of the law has occurred or that “substantial or specific danger” is possible. They previously needed to show that an actual violation of law had occurred that created and presented a “substantial and specific” danger to be protected from retaliation, expanding the type of whistleblowing that is protected.
New York State Senator Jessica Ramos (D–Jackson Heights), who represents a portion of New York City, sponsored the bill.
“When a worker comes forward to raise the alarm on dangerous or unlawful conditions in their workplace, they should have the security to know that taking that courageous step will not come back to haunt them. [The legislation] expands the same whistleblower protections available to public employees to workers in the private sector — including independent contractors,” Ramos said. “The importance of this bill has been emphasized by workers’ experiences during the height of the pandemic, as well as in the face of a troubling national trend of efforts to misclassify workers. By signing this bill, Governor Hochul is taking a significant step to signal to workers that we have their backs, and their health, dignity, and safety at work are of paramount importance.”

$15 minimum wage phase-in continues as labor shortages drive up wages
New York’s $15 minimum wage phase-in will continue with the next stage taking effect on Dec. 31 of this year. The announcement follows a required report by the state Division of the Budget that found “evidence of pressure for wages to rise in the midst of a pandemic-driven labor shortage,” the New York State Department
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New York’s $15 minimum wage phase-in will continue with the next stage taking effect on Dec. 31 of this year.
The announcement follows a required report by the state Division of the Budget that found “evidence of pressure for wages to rise in the midst of a pandemic-driven labor shortage,” the New York State Department of Labor announced in late September.
The director of the Division of Budget, together with the state commissioner of labor, determined that the minimum wage should rise to $13.20 per hour in most of the state based upon economic factors and indices.
The minimum wage will increase to $15 per hour on Long Island and in Westchester County , matching the $15 hourly minimum already set in New York City.
“Companies, particularly those that employ low-wage workers, are already raising wages and in some cases offering incentives to hire amid a labor-shortage that is showing no sign of abating, and it makes sense to raise the wage floor now and continue supporting New York’s families while providing a predictable path forward for businesses,” New York State Department of Labor Commissioner Roberta Reardon said in a release.
The report produced by the Division of the Budget is required by the state minimum-wage statute to review the state of the economy and determine whether increases move forward as scheduled or should be delayed.
For 2021, the law also requires the director of the Division of Budget evaluate economic factors and determine, with the commissioner of labor, the rate of minimum-wage increases outside of New York City, Long Island, and Westchester County.
As the report describes, the minimum wage in that region is determined to increase based on the consumer-price index for all urban wage earners and clerical workers as well as nonfarm business labor productivity. It enables low-wage workers to continue to afford the same basket of goods and services — and then some — based on rising productivity.
Minimum-wage report findings
The Division of the Budget’s minimum-wage report found that the low-wage sector was the “most severely impacted” by the pandemic. One million lost jobs, or 57.2 percent of the private-sector losses, were in the three industries where minimum-wage workers are most concentrated — retail trade, health care and social assistance, leisure and hospitality.
These sectors represented only 42.5 percent of private employment at the February 2020 pre-COVID peak. In just two months, the low-wage sector had a combined loss of 31 percent of its jobs.
The report also found that results from the Survey of Consumer Expectations, compiled by the Federal Reserve Bank of New York, suggest that the pandemic has caused some workers to reassess the value of their labor.
The survey asks workers the lowest wage they would accept in their chosen line of work, called a reservation wage. Survey results indicate the nationwide reservation wage reached a historical peak of $71,400 in March 2021, a 15.7 percent increase from March 2020. Even though it dipped in July 2021, it remained elevated over a two-year period, indicating “particularly strong growth” in reservation wages among less educated and young workers.
In addition, the report found that the Conference Board Help Wanted Online Index is showing statewide job postings at record highs.
Total job postings for July 2021, the most recent month available, exceeded the March 2020 pre-pandemic peak by 72.4 percent. The shortage of low-skill/low-wage labor appears to be “even more severe.”
July postings specifying a high-school education or vocational training exceed their March 2020 pre-pandemic peak by 95.4 percent. Additionally, postings specifying either a high-school education or vocational training represent 29.9 percent of total postings for July 2021, just below its May 2021 historic high of 31.6 percent.

Labor & employment attorney Lynn joins Hancock Estabrook
SYRACUSE, N.Y. — Hancock Estabrook, LLP recently announced that Tish E. Lynn has joined the Syracuse–based law firm as a partner in its labor & employment practice area. Lynn has more than 25 years of public-sector experience, which will allow her to bring “pertinent and decisive counsel to effectively manage various employment and employer issues
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SYRACUSE, N.Y. — Hancock Estabrook, LLP recently announced that Tish E. Lynn has joined the Syracuse–based law firm as a partner in its labor & employment practice area.
Lynn has more than 25 years of public-sector experience, which will allow her to bring “pertinent and decisive counsel to effectively manage various employment and employer issues for clients,” the firm said in a news release.
Specifically, Lynn has an extensive background in collective bargaining, contract preparation and implementation, grievances, improper-practice charges, and other labor-relations matters involving various labor unions. She also represents clients in civil litigation in federal and state courts, as well as administrative proceedings and audits before federal and state agencies including the Equal Employment Opportunity Commission, the New York State Division of Human Rights, the Department of Labor, and the Public Employment Relations Board.
Lynn was formerly the personnel manager for Livingston County, managing the human-resource operation for about 1,300 employees. In this role, she administered benefits, payroll, position control, policies, investigations, recruitment, training, employee discipline, Civil Service compliance and layoffs, and she implemented the Family Medical Leave Act (or FMLA) compliance procedures.
Lynn graduated received her bachelor’s degree from Le Moyne College and her law degree from the University of Richmond, T.C. Williams School of Law.

Syracuse foundry to pay $276K for workplace-safety violations
Frazer & Jones Co. Inc. agrees to correct serious hazards, implement enhanced safeguards SYRACUSE, N.Y. — A Syracuse iron foundry cited by the U.S. Department of Labor’s Occupational Safety and Health Administration (OSHA) for dozens of health and safety violations has agreed to correct 60 cited hazards, implement enhanced corrective measures, and pay $276,189 in
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Frazer & Jones Co. Inc. agrees to correct serious hazards, implement enhanced safeguards
SYRACUSE, N.Y. — A Syracuse iron foundry cited by the U.S. Department of Labor’s Occupational Safety and Health Administration (OSHA) for dozens of health and safety violations has agreed to correct 60 cited hazards, implement enhanced corrective measures, and pay $276,189 in penalties in a settlement agreement with the department.
OSHA’s Syracuse–area office cited Frazer & Jones Co. Inc. in November 2019 following safety and health inspections that identified multiple hazards. They included: exposing employees to crystalline silica, silica dust and combustible dust; inadequate respiratory protection; unsafe work floors and walking surfaces; deficient confined space safeguards; inaccessible or unavailable fire extinguishers; and an impeded exit route.
The settlement, deemed a final order of the independent Occupational Safety and Health Review Commission effective Oct. 14, contains enhanced abatement measures that Frazer & Jones will implement. That includes semi-annual inspections of the facility by a safety consultant; addressing the consultant’s recommendations for action and sharing them with the facility’s labor-management safety committee and the corporate parent’s board of directors; implementing systems to receive and respond to employee complaints; and having a ventilation consultant evaluate the facility’s dust-control system for overhaul.
“The hazards our inspectors found at Frazer & Jones Co. Inc. exposed workers to potential injuries and long-term health effects. This settlement requires correction of those hazards and it commits the employer to implement ongoing measures to prevent these conditions from recurring in the future,” Jeffrey Prebish, OSHA area director in Syracuse, said in a release.
OSHA’s Syracuse–area office conducted the original inspections. Trial attorney Rosemary Almonte of the department’s regional Office of the Solicitor in New York City negotiated the settlement for the department.

Excellus appoints Rigas as general counsel, senior VP
DeWITT, N.Y. — Excellus BlueCross BlueShield has appointed Brenda Rigas as its general counsel and senior VP. Rigas has been the primary legal support for compliance and regulatory affairs at the health insurer over the past 14 years. She has managed the organization’s response to “various high-profile matters,” Excellus said. “Brenda has been managing the
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DeWITT, N.Y. — Excellus BlueCross BlueShield has appointed Brenda Rigas as its general counsel and senior VP.
Rigas has been the primary legal support for compliance and regulatory affairs at the health insurer over the past 14 years. She has managed the organization’s response to “various high-profile matters,” Excellus said.
“Brenda has been managing the legal team for two years and has worked to better align the team’s resources with our business needs,” Jim Reed, president and CEO of Excellus, said in a news release. “She has developed trusted, collaborative relationships across the organization and with key outside counsels and regulators — we are proud to announce this appointment and have Brenda on our team.”
In her new role, Rigas is chief legal officer and advisor at Excellus, managing the full range of legal services and matters for all corporate operations and activities.
Prior to joining Excellus in 2007, Rigas worked as counsel to the chair of the New York State Workers’ Compensation Board, where she participated in regulatory and administrative-reform initiatives. Following eight years with New York State, Rigas provided consulting services to large, self-funded employers on workers’-compensation compliance and management.
A graduate of Ithaca College, Rigas earned her law degree from the Syracuse University College of Law. She serves on the board of directors for a local, nonprofit skilled nursing and rehabilitation facility and is active in the Marietta and Marcellus communities, where she resides with her husband and two daughters, Excellus said.

New York’s paid family leave law expands to include siblings
Employees will be able to take paid family leave to care for a sibling under a new state law that Gov. Kathy Hochul signed Nov. 1. The legislation expands New York State’s Paid Family Leave law. Under the current law, employees cannot take leave to care for a sibling with a serious health condition. The new law
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Employees will be able to take paid family leave to care for a sibling under a new state law that Gov. Kathy Hochul signed Nov. 1.
The legislation expands New York State’s Paid Family Leave law. Under the current law, employees cannot take leave to care for a sibling with a serious health condition.
The new law won’t go into effect until Jan. 1, 2023, Hochul’s office said.
In remarks at the Nov. 1 bill-signing event in New York City, Hochul recalled a time in her life that she needed paid family leave.
“My husband was a public servant. I was a public servant. We didn’t have the money for extra help to come in and take care of us and we struggled. And at the time not having the leave, not having the ability to work from home, we put our personal finances aside and I ended up staying home and I understood then how this was a basic human right, to be able to take care of your newborn or your adopted child or your family members when they are desperately in need of someone to hold their hand,” Hochul said. “I’m here to declare that taking care of your family is a human right. The right to be able to not lose your income, not have to make the horrible decision of am I able to take care of an elderly parent or a newborn baby or am I going to have to give up my income? No one should have to deal with that.”
The measure builds upon the paid family leave legislation that was enacted in 2016, which “created one of the most comprehensive paid family leave programs in the nation,” Hochul’s office contends.
In effect since 2018, New York’s paid family leave program is employee-paid insurance that provides workers with job-protected, paid time off to bond with a newly born, adopted or fostered child; care for a family member with a serious health condition (which may include severe cases of COVID-19), or assist loved ones when a member of the family is deployed abroad on active military service.
Paid family leave may also be available in some situations when employees or their minor, dependent child is under an order of quarantine or isolation due to COVID-19. Eligible workers may take up to 12 weeks off at 67 percent of their pay (up to a cap) to care for family members in times of need, per Hochul’s office.
Paid family leave family care currently covers caring for spouses, domestic partners, children and stepchildren, parents, parents-in-law, grandparents and grandchildren with a serious health condition.
Through the legislation, the definition of “family members” expands to include siblings. This includes biological siblings, adopted siblings, stepsiblings and half-siblings. These family members can live outside of New York state and even outside the country.
VIEWPOINT: NYS Department of Labor Issues FAQs on Recreational Marijuana
The New York Department of Labor (DOL) [in early October] published Frequently Asked Questions (FAQs) regarding the legalization of recreational marijuana and its impact on the workplace (https://dol.ny.gov/system/files/documents/2021/10/p420-cannabisfaq-10-08-21.pdf). The Marijuana Regulation and Taxation Act (MRTA), which legalized the recreational use of marijuana for individuals over the age of 21 in New York, was passed in March
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The New York Department of Labor (DOL) [in early October] published Frequently Asked Questions (FAQs) regarding the legalization of recreational marijuana and its impact on the workplace (https://dol.ny.gov/system/files/documents/2021/10/p420-cannabisfaq-10-08-21.pdf).
The Marijuana Regulation and Taxation Act (MRTA), which legalized the recreational use of marijuana for individuals over the age of 21 in New York, was passed in March 2021. The MRTA amended Labor Law § 201-d, to specify that the recreational use or consumption of marijuana outside of work hours and off an employer’s premises, constitutes lawful recreational activity. Thus, subject to limited exceptions, most employees cannot be disciplined or discriminated against for using and/or consuming recreational marijuana. For more information on Labor Law § 201-d and the recognized exceptions, see our prior blog post at: https://www.bsk.com/news-events-videos/what-the-legalization-of-recreational-marijuana-means-for-new-york-employers.
The DOL’s FAQs confirm much of what we initially knew following the March 31, 2021 amendments to § 201-d. Therefore, notwithstanding its position on drug testing, which is discussed in greater detail below, the DOL’s guidance is largely unsurprising.
Disciplinary and other employment action
The first portion of the FAQs relates to employee discipline. While employers generally cannot discipline employees for their off-duty, off-premises use of recreational marijuana, the protection from discipline is not absolute. The FAQs provide that employers may impose discipline or take action against workers who are impaired such that they “manifest specific articulable symptoms of impairment” that diminish their performance or interfere with an employer’s obligation to provide a safe, hazard-free workplace.
Since § 201-d was amended by the MRTA, one of employers’ burning questions has related to the meaning of “specific articulable symptoms.” Unfortunately, the DOL declined to provide a definition, instead stating: “[t]here is no dispositive and complete list of symptoms of impairment. Rather, articulable symptoms of impairment are objectively observable indications that the employee’s performance of the duties of … their position are decreased or lessened.” By way of example the DOL explained that “the operation of heavy machinery in an unsafe and reckless manner may be considered an articulable symptom of impairment.”
Although the DOL did not provide much clarity as to the meaning of specific articulable symptoms, it did provide some insight as to what may not be cited by employers as articulable symptoms of impairment. For instance, specific articulable symptoms of impairment do not include the following:
Observable signs of marijuana use without more — The FAQs state that “[o]nly symptoms that provide objectively observable indications that the employee’s performance of the essential duties or tasks of their position are decreased or lessened may be cited” as symptoms of impairment. This suggests that physical signs typically or stereotypically associated with marijuana use cannot, by themselves, be cited as articulable symptoms of impairment.
A positive test for use of marijuana — Employers cannot use a positive test for marijuana as a basis for articulable symptoms of impairment because there is no test currently capable of indicating present intoxication.
The noticeable odor of marijuana — Employers also cannot use the noticeable odor of marijuana as a basis for articulable symptoms of impairment without any additional indicia of impairment (i.e., diminished performance or the creation of an unsafe, hazardous condition).
Use and possession of marijuana at work
The FAQs also address employees’ use of marijuana during working hours, including meal breaks and rest periods. Consistent with the text of § 201-d, the FAQs reiterate that employers are free to prohibit the use of recreational marijuana during meal breaks and rest periods, including break periods during which workers are permitted to leave the physical workplace. Similarly, employers may disallow employees from using or consuming recreational marijuana while they are on-call or “expected to be engaged in work.”
Employers may also forbid workers from possessing recreational marijuana in the workplace, including anywhere on the employer’s premises (whether the property is owned or leased), employer-owned vehicles, and in spaces such as employee lockers and desks. However, because the DOL does not consider an employee’s private residence to be a “worksite,” employers are limited in prohibiting employee possession of recreational marijuana in a remote employee’s home. That being said, employers may take employment action against a remote employee if he or she exhibits specific articulable symptoms of impairment during working hours.
Workplace policies addressing the use or consumption of recreational marijuana are neither required nor prohibited by § 201-d. However, employers with drug-use policies that pre-date the legalization of § 201-d should review their policies to ensure compliance with the new law.
Drug testing
Again, the FAQs are largely unsurprising except as they relate to drug testing. In addition to the meaning of specific articulable symptoms, questions about the permissiveness of drug testing predominated following the legalization of recreational marijuana. Employers were eager to ascertain whether their ability to drug test employees for marijuana usage was impacted by the MRTA. Unfortunately, this question was left unanswered.
Unlike the MRTA and Labor Law § 201-d, neither of which expressly addressed drug testing for marijuana, the DOL has taken the position that drug testing is not permissible unless an employer falls within one of the limited exceptions outlined in § 201-d(4-a) (i.e., employers subject to certain federal regulations, employers who risk the loss of federal contracts, etc.). For more information on the exceptions recognized under § 201-d, please refer to our previous blog post.
The DOL’s position is not supported by the plain language of § 201-d, which does not address drug testing one way or the other. As there has not yet been litigation testing the legality of employment-related marijuana testing following the legalization of recreational marijuana, it remains unclear as to how this issue will be resolved by the courts.
Miscellaneous
The FAQs also address several other miscellaneous points as outlined below:
Employee waiver. Employers may not require workers to waive the protections of § 201-d as a condition of future or continued employment.
Geographical limitations. The protections of § 201-d apply only to employees physically working in New York state. Employees working outside the state, including those working remotely out of state for employers with New York operations, are not covered by § 201-d.
Covered employers. All New York employers, both public and private, regardless of size, are subject to § 201-d.
Covered employees. Most employees working in New York, including students, are covered under § 201-d. However, because recreational marijuana may only be lawfully used by adults over 21 years of age, employees under the age of 21 are not protected. That being said, the FAQs state that employers do not have any obligation to report employees under the age of 21 who are found to have consumed recreational marijuana.
Prospective application. There is no retroactive application of § 201-d. That is, employees who were terminated because of their use of marijuana before recreational marijuana was legalized in New York do not have a right to reinstatement now that it is a legally consumable product.
Hannah K. Redmond is an associate attorney in the Syracuse office of Bond, Schoeneck & King PLLC. She focuses her practice on representing employers in labor and employment-law matters. Contact Redmond at hredmond@bsk.com. This article is drawn from the firm’s New York Labor and Employment Law Report blog.
Bond attorneys contribute to 2021 Chambers USA regional employment guide
Bond, Schoeneck & King PLLC (BSK) attorneys Michael Bernstein and Peter Jones are the contributing editors of Chambers USA’s 2021 edition of the “US Regional Employment” guide. They’ve also authored the introduction to this widely used guide for in-house legal counsel and human-resource professionals. Bond attorneys Louis DiLorenzo, Thomas Eron, and Howard Miller, along with Bernstein and
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Bond, Schoeneck & King PLLC (BSK) attorneys Michael Bernstein and Peter Jones are the contributing editors of Chambers USA’s 2021 edition of the “US Regional Employment” guide.
They’ve also authored the introduction to this widely used guide for in-house legal counsel and human-resource professionals.
Bond attorneys Louis DiLorenzo, Thomas Eron, and Howard Miller, along with Bernstein and Jones, authored the New York State chapter of the regional guide, BSK said in an Oct. 18 news release on the firm’s website.
The regional guide provides insights into employment issues; commentary on the continuing impact of COVID-19 on the workplace; the use of social media; the “Black Lives Matter” and “Me Too” movements; pay equity; a decline in the unionization of the private-sector workplace; discrimination, harassment and whistle-blowing claims; and an expansion of protections and restrictions of the labor law to both unorganized and organized employees in the workplace.
The New York chapter provides a current picture of employment issues, relationships, trends, developments, adjustment of disputes, and other considerations global entities should understand when determining whether or where to establish or enhance their presence in New York State.
The introduction that Bernstein and Jones wrote for “US Regional Employment” 2021, included these first few sentences:
“Employment law in the private sector, as with any area of the law, necessarily begins with definition. At this stage in the evolution of our labor and employment history, one might expect the fundamental concepts and definitions to be fairly well settled. To many, however, the picture at times has been somewhat unsettled. Due to the impact of COVID-19, these concerns have been magnified in ways that hardly could have been contemplated. From a positive point of view, this is arguably attributable to a vibrant economy’s need, and its willingness, to adapt to the changes in our global and socio-economic, political and technological climate. At the same time, alternative solutions and the impact of COVID-19 have created not only new challenges, but, arguably, unintended consequences,” they wrote.
The entire publication, along with the New York chapter, are available at the firm’s website (www.bsk.com).
Chambers Global Practice Guides provide legal commentary on the main practice areas in key jurisdictions around the world. The guides focus on the practical legal issues affecting businesses and enable the reader to compare legislation and procedure across a range of key jurisdictions.
Bond, Schoeneck & King is a law firm with 250 attorneys serving individuals, companies, and public-sector entities in a range of practice areas. Bond has nine offices in New York state and offices in or near Boston; Kansas City, Missouri; Naples, Florida; and Red Bank, New Jersey, per the firm’s release.

AARP says state law boosts workers’ retirement security
ALBANY, N.Y. — AARP New York is applauding a new state law that will help as many as 2.5 million private-sector workers save for retirement through an automatic enrollment payroll-deduction savings program. The new law “strengthens” the state’s enacted but yet-to-be-implemented Secure Choice Savings program. It requires private companies and nonprofit organizations with at least
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ALBANY, N.Y. — AARP New York is applauding a new state law that will help as many as 2.5 million private-sector workers save for retirement through an automatic enrollment payroll-deduction savings program.
The new law “strengthens” the state’s enacted but yet-to-be-implemented Secure Choice Savings program. It requires private companies and nonprofit organizations with at least 10 employees — that don’t already offer a retirement-savings option — to enroll their workers in a portable Secure Choice individual-retirement account (IRA) unless the employee opts out.
The requirement promotes retirement saving in a “convenient, low cost, and portable” manner, New York Gov. Kathy Hochul’s office contended in an Oct. 21 news release.
Hochul signed the bill Oct. 21 and AARP New York reacted the same day.
Established in 2015 by the New York State Secure Choice Savings Program Act, the Secure Choice Savings plan is a “self-sufficient,” retirement-savings program in the form of an automatic enrollment payroll deduction IRA. The program is overseen by the New York State Secure Choice Savings Board, composed of nine appointed members.
The New York State Department of Taxation and Finance will oversee the development and implementation of the program “as the board sees fit,” per Hochul’s office.
Over half New York’s 18- to 64-year-old private-sector workforce lacks access to employer-offered savings options as fewer companies offer pensions or 401(k)s than in previous decades, according to AARP New York.
The stronger Secure Choice program will “particularly benefit” employees of color — two-thirds of Hispanics, about 60 percent of Asian Americans, and 52 percent of African Americans — working in private-sector jobs who don’t have access to a workplace savings option.
The law will also offer businesses a “virtually cost-free” way to provide their employees with a workplace retirement-savings benefit. A recent AARP New York survey found that about four out of five small businesses in New York (79 percent) agreed that the legislation (S5395A/A.3213A) should be signed into law.
“Governor Hochul is empowering millions of working New Yorkers to save for a financially secure and independent retirement – while providing small businesses an effective way to attract and retain employees,” Beth Finkel, director of AARP New York, contended.
New York’s new law is modeled on other state programs in California, Illinois, and Oregon.
With automatic enrollment, 90 percent of eligible employees participate in workplace retirement-savings programs, AARP New York said, citing an April 2017 report from the AARP Public Policy Institute titled, “Higher Initial Contribution Levels in Automatic
Enrollment Plans May Result in Greater Retirement Savings: A Review of the Evidence.”
Without it, participation rates drop to 70 percent — including mostly older employees and higher paid workers. Younger employees, women, people of color, and lower-paid workers are less likely to participate, the April 17 report noted.
OPINION: New York is Inviting Criminals to Commit Crimes
It could not be more apparent the criminal-justice “reforms” being championed by the liberal majority conferences [of the New York Legislature] are creating a dangerous environment for New Yorkers. One need only read their local newspaper to document the myriad failures and backfires of these policies. Residents in my district were forced to experience them firsthand [recently]
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It could not be more apparent the criminal-justice “reforms” being championed by the liberal majority conferences [of the New York Legislature] are creating a dangerous environment for New Yorkers. One need only read their local newspaper to document the myriad failures and backfires of these policies. Residents in my district were forced to experience them firsthand [recently] as we witnessed one individual terrorizing our neighborhoods and getting arrested four times in less than a day.
That’s right, four arrests … in less than a day.
Bryan Salazar, a 25-year-old man from Del Rio, Texas, was arrested and released on three separate occasions over the course of a 24-hour period before finally being held with bail for felony burglary and grand larceny. Prior to his last arrest, which was the result of Salazar breaking into a construction office in Whitestown, the Texan had been arraigned not 10 minutes prior for another burglary charge.
The many accusations levied against the man include breaking into a car dealership, stealing a mobility scooter from a local Walmart, and trespassing into the home of a nearby resident. Each time Salazar was arrested, he was released back into the community.
I have repeatedly warned my [legislative] colleagues in the majority that the overhauling of the bail system and taking away the authority of judges to hold defendants was going to make New York less safe. Stories like Bryan Salazar’s have become commonplace, and the ugliest parts of criminal-justice reform championed by the liberal lawmakers are being exposed every day. Additionally, another misguided component of Democrats’ reforms — one that called for criminal defendants to have access to crime scenes, including the homes of the individuals they were accused of victimizing — was fortunately struck down as unconstitutional by the New York State Supreme Court.
Simply put, Democrats have created a system that protects and emboldens criminals to continue to repeatedly commit crimes. These so-called “reforms” were pitched to the public as a way to alleviate some of the pressure on the prison system and ensure poor individuals were treated fairly in the courts. These are laudable goals, but unfortunately have no correlation to the illogical and misguided policies currently in place.
New York is less safe than it was just a few years ago, and it is the job of the legislature and governor to protect every single person they represent. Right now, that is not happening. We cannot continue to let New York slip any further. The criminal element here is operating unchecked, and it is long past time for a drastic overhaul of the policies and procedures governing our criminal-justice system. Without that overhaul, I have no doubt we will be reading about another Bryan Salazar terrorizing another community next week.
William (Will) A. Barclay, Republican, is the New York Assembly minority leader and represents the 120th New York Assembly District, which encompasses most of Oswego County, including the cities of Oswego and Fulton, as well as the town of Lysander in Onondaga County and town of Ellisburg in Jefferson County. Contact Barclay at barclaw@assembly.state.ny.us.
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