A widespread issue
“We had so many phone calls in our office about wage theft. Believe it or not, a lot of folks don’t even know that’s something they can fight,” said Councilmember and bill sponsor Kendra Brooks of the Working Families Party.
In 2019, Philadelphia City Council passed an ordinance that prohibits employers from discrimination in hiring practices, requires written contracts with job duties and an hourly wage and requires meal and rest breaks, as well as sick time and paid leave. The law took effect in May 2020.
New Jersey, New York, California, Hawaii, Massachusetts, Connecticut, Oregon, Illinois, Nevada, New Mexico, Virginia and Rhode Island already have domestic worker protections.
The goal with the new regulations is to make sure workers are “free from retaliation and employers are being held accountable,” Brooks added.
Businesses oppose the changes
But there’s been pushback by some business associations over the new rules.
Ashley Miscevich, manager for local government advocacy at Greater Philadelphia Chamber of Commerce, testified against the legislation during the late April committee hearing.
“Presumption of retaliation assumes guilt and places an unreasonably high burden on employers requiring them to prove by clear and convincing evidence that a routine decision wasn’t retaliatory, even if they weren’t aware that the protected activity had occurred,” Miscevich said.
In response, Brooks added some amendments to the bill such as a clear path for employers to be removed from the bad actor list.
“Some of the changes were made just to make sure it was a balance between what’s helpful for workers and what’s actually possible for businesses,” Brooks said. “The compromise we made wasn’t huge, but we want to be fair.”
But even after the amendments, the business chamber was still opposed to the legislation.
The chamber “has serious concerns about the impact of the POWER Act on Philadelphia’s competitiveness and job growth, particularly for small and mid-sized businesses who face some of the highest taxes and most stringent regulations in the country,” said Shannon Williams, senior vice president of advocacy for the Chamber of Commerce for Greater Philadelphia in a statement on Thursday after the vote.
Instead, the chamber wants a task force to review the labor laws instead.
Ed Grose, executive director of the Greater Philadelphia Hotel Association, also testified against the bill.
“Many small- and medium-sized businesses often lack the legal or human resources capacity to investigate and resolve these types of issues while still running the day-to-day business,” Grose said. “While we support the efforts to hold employers accountable for improper retaliatory behavior, this bill sweeps many perfunctory and standard business management practices into the realm of improper retaliation.”