(Legislators, workers and labor leaders gather to support changes to the County’s Displaced Service Employees Protection Law)
BOARD APPROVES MEASURES TO STRENGTHEN PROTECTIONS FOR BUILDING SERVICE WORKERS.
Maintenance, Cleaning Workers and Others Get New Help When Buildings or Contracts Change Hands.
White Plains, NY
— On Monday
night, the Westchester County Board of Legislators voted on a
bi-partisan basis, 16-1, to strengthen a law protecting building service
workers like cleaning staff and maintenance personal, who face
displacement when building ownership or service contracts
change hands.
The
Displaced Service Employees Protection Law was originally passed also
by a vote of 16-1 in 2013. It created a required transition
period, during which new employers must offer workers the chance to
remain on the job. It also created a time frame for those offers and for
that transitional employment, and created limits on the size of
contractors who are covered.
The
changes passed Monday lower the threshold for covered contractors from
15 to 5 employees and extend the transitional employment
period from 60 days to 90 days. In addition, there are expanded
requirements for information sharing to ensure that workers know in a
timely manner precisely whom they must communicate with at the new
employer.
Leg.
Catherine Borgia (D -Briarcliff Manor, Cortlandt, Croton-on-Hudson,
Ossining, Peekskill), one of the co-sponsors, said,
"Since 2013, it became clear that there were provisions that needed to
change. We needed to prevent employers from making an end run around
the spirit of the law by using small companies, or avoiding their
obligations by not being sufficiently transparent
in their communications with workers. We want to make sure the law does
what it was intended to do -- protect working families in Westchester."
Another
co-sponsor, Leg. Kitley Covill (D - Bedford, Lewisboro, Mount Kisco,
North Salem, Pound Ridge, Somers) said, "This law
is about protecting people who, through no fault of their own, find
their livelihoods threated. With the changes we’ve passed, these hard
working people will now have a longer time to find new work or better
yet to maybe make the case for themselves to their
new employers, more people will be covered by the law, and new employers
won’t be hidden behind a string of names, address and legal entities.
We want to make sure service workers in Westchester County are getting a
fair shake."
Co-sponsor
Leg. David Tubiolo (D - Mount Vernon, Yonkers) said, “Today, we rectify
the loopholes to stop corporate greed from
taking advantage of working people. With our amendments, service workers
will be reassured that they can’t just be displaced, because a company
wants to make an insignificant profit. Protecting working people is part
of our identity, being just and fair, but
is also good government in action”.
Lenore
Friedlaender, Assistant to the President of 32BJ SEIU and head of the
union in the Hudson Valley, said, “When employers try to circumvent the
intent
of the law in an effort to reduce wages and benefits it destabilizes the
playing field and creates a destructive race to the bottom. Workers
wages, benefits and job security suffer as a result.”
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