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Return-to-Work Considerations

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As businesses begin to contemplate reopening, recalling remote and furloughed workers or, simply, how the new workplace might be structured, many questions arise. What will be the expected norms for employees, vendors, customers and visitors after the stay-at-home directive eases? What obligations do employers have to their employees?

On April 29, Gov. Gavin Newsom issued California's Roadmap to Modify the Stay-at-Home Order, and reopen the state. To read the full plan see https://www.gov.ca.gov/wp-content/uploads/2020/04/California-Roadmap-to-Modify-the-Stay-at-Home-Order.pdf. Just as many local health and safety orders were set to expire, several counties issued updated and extended orders. Many of them relaxed prior restrictions on what businesses were considered "essential," and hence could reopen. See the next section, Appendix — Web Links For Local Safety Orders, for all updated local orders.

The federal Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC), the Occupational Health and Safety Administration (OSHA) and California’s Division of Occupational Safety and Health (Cal/OSHA) have issued guidelines to help employers understand their legal obligations to protect the health and safety of their returning workforce. In addition, essential businesses have learned many lessons in the last two months that might be helpful to other businesses that had to close, move to a remote model or significantly curtail operations. Find their guidelines here:

These agencies have scrambled to help businesses promote workplace safety. Their guidance, however, generally is not binding. Businesses should review and implement their suggestions to the extent possible –– a business that acts in good faith to protect its employees from exposure to the virus, to establish policies and practices to reduce transmission, to investigate and handle possible exposure, is a business better able to defend against claims of an unsafe workplace.


STATE AND LOCAL ORDERS FOR REOPENING BUSINESS

By the end of April, the call to reopen businesses was growing loud. State and local governments have responded with updated orders addressing how industry will reopen, and permit employees to return to the workplace.

By mid-May, Gov. Newsom issued a four-stage plan with six components (explained below) to reopen the state, a road map to modify the stay-at-home orders mindful of specific counties' requests to reopen. The governor's plans can be found here. [1].

Six Bay Area counties and the city of Berkeley jointly released an updated order extending most social distancing mandates through May. The order also expanded the definition of essential businesses to allow resumption of all types of construction as long as it follows certain safety protocols described in the order. Other outdoor businesses, such as nurseries, landscaping companies and gardeners may resume work because the risk of that labor transmitting the virus is low, and social distancing during work is possible. Some child care facilities may reopen to care for the children of essential workers, but they are limited to 12 children. Real estate transactions are permitted, but visiting open houses in person is restricted. The six counties participating in the order are Santa Clara, Marin, Alameda, San Mateo, San Francisco and Contra Costa.

On May 10, San Diego County became the first locality to require essential businesses and those opening under California's guidelines to conduct daily temperature-screenings of employees reporting to work. They also must post a Social Distancing and Sanitation Protocol, under which businesses are to develop and post specific plans for health screenings, for maintaining social distancing and for regular sanitation. The county will provide a template. Finally, each business must prepare and post a Safe Reopening Plan, for which forms are available on the county's website.

Employers must prevent employees showing temperatures above 100 degrees from entering the facility, or if they have a cough, shortness of breath, trouble breathing or at least two of these symptoms:

  • fever
  • chills
  • body aches
  • sore throat
  • loss of smell or taste.

Symptom-screening may be performed if a thermometer isn't available. We expect other counties will follow this example, especially because the state of California has endorsed temperature- and symptom-checking as part of its reopening guidance. The order can be found in Appendix A.

On May 22, the City and County of Los Angeles issued an updated order and has begun allowing specific retail and low-risk businesses to begin reopening. That's possible only if the business can keep a low incidence of person-to-person contact, and ensure continued social distancing. The protocol allows retailers not located within an indoor mall or shopping center, and manufacturing and logistics sector businesses to reopen as long as these rules are followed:

  • Members of the public aren't allowed inside the retail establishment, but customers may be provided goods and services via curbside, doorside, outdoor and at-home delivery or pickup.
  • The retailer prepares, implements and posts Reopening Protocols for Retail Establishments] issued by the Department of Public Health.
  • Other sector businesses prepare, implement and post the reopening protocol for specific business.

Currently, these business- and activity-specific reopening protocols have been published:

  • beaches
  • bike parts
  • car dealerships
  • community gardens
  • equestrian centers
  • golf courses
  • manufacturing/logistics
  • model airplane areas
  • outdoor shooting facilities
  • retail establishments
  • substance use disorder and mental health
  • tennis/pickle ball courts
  • trails
  • warehousing

Each protocol requires employers to conduct symptom checks before employees are permitted to enter the workspace. They also state that a temperature check should be done at the work site if feasible. Unfortunately, there is no guidance about what is considered feasible. Although there is some overlap among the protocols, there are differences. So, prior to reopening, businesses must evaluate the protocols specific to their sectors. Failure to comply with the county orders and health protocols subject noncompliant businesses to deprivation of utilities, fines and/or misdemeanor liability.

Given the disparity among cities and counties, employers should always refer to the order applicable to the city or county in which they do business. Links to county orders can be found at Appendix — Web Links For Local Safety Orders.


GOV. NEWSOM'S PLAN TO REOPEN THE STATE

California's plan to reopen has four stages addressing safety and preparedness, lower-risk workplaces, higher-risk workplaces and the end of stay-at-home orders. It also has six components addressing:

  • how to monitor, test and trace contacts;
  • how to protect at-risk individuals from infection;
  • how hospitals can handle surges;
  • the development of treatments;
  • how to determine when to reinstate measures such as stay-at-home orders; and
  • how businesses, schools and child care facilities can support physical distancing.

The governor emphasizes physical distancing as an important component of reopening businesses. The plan contemplates reinstating stay-at-home orders if the tracking data indicate it's necessary. The state also envisions the widespread use of face masks and physical modifications of workplaces to encourage distancing. Employers should consider the use of personal protective equipment if necessary, and how to implement physical distancing into their return-to-work plan, for both their workers and the public, if applicable. They also should prepare for the possibility that stay-at-home orders will be reissued.

On May 4, Gov. Newsom announced that retail and hospitality businesses may reopen with modifications on Friday, May 8. The businesses that may reopen include establishments such as book stores, clothing, toy and sporting goods stores, as well as music shops and florists. It does not include salons, gyms, malls, offices or dine-in service in restaurants. The businesses that may reopen must adhere to restrictions such as physical distancing and curbside delivery.

INDUSTRY-SPECIFIC GUIDANCE

On May 12, the state issued industry-specific guidelines. The advisory is not permission for these industries reopen –– it's a road map of preparation for reopening. Guidance was issued for:

  1. office workspaces
  2. retail
  3. dine-in restaurants
  4. shopping malls, destination shopping centers, strip and outlet malls and swap meets

Cities and counties are not required to follow the governor's plan; they may enforce stricter guidelines. The San Francisco Bay Area's six counties, with stricter orders in place, will not open immediately. Los Angeles also will not reopen, although Yuma, Modoc and Sutter counties have reopened. The governor made clear that local communities could have separate timelines. Given the disparity in state and local guidelines, we advise all employers to review and abide by their local orders. Links to all county orders are found in the next section, Appendix — Web Links For Local Safety Orders.

WORK SITE-SPECIFIC PLANS

All work site-specific plans must:

  • include a written prevention plan following a comprehensive risk assessment;
  • supply contact information for the local health department;
  • train and communicate the plan to employees;
  • regularly evaluate the workplace for compliance;
  • investigate COVID-19 illness and determine if any work-related factors could have contributed to the risk of infection; and
  • identify close contacts of the affected person, and isolate them.

Employers also should update the injury and illness prevention program (IIPP) to protect employees from workplace hazards. The work site-specific plan should be incorporated into the IIPP and be posted and available to employees.

WORK SITE-SPECIFIC TRAINING REQUIREMENTS

All work site-specific plans must educate and train employees. The material must include:

  • information on how to prevent COVID-19 and what health conditions might make individuals more susceptible;
  • home self-screening for temperature and other symptoms using CDC guidelines;
  • the importance of not coming to work if they have a frequent cough, fever, difficulty breathing, chills, muscle pain, headache, recent loss of smell or taste or if they live with someone who has been diagnosed;
  • advice to seek medical attention if symptoms become severe;
  • the importance of frequent hand-washing with soap and water per CDC guidelines;
  • the importance of physical distancing both at and away from work; and
  • the proper use of face coverings.

WORK SITE-SPECIFIC CONTROL MEASURES AND SCREENING REQUIREMENTS

Each work site-specific plan has unique control measures and screening requirements. We encourage you to carefully review the specific plan for your industry, and to comply with all of its requirements. These control measures and screening requirements apply to all work sites:

  • Provide temperature and/or symptom-screenings for all workers at the beginning of the shift. Screen vendors, contractors and visitors entering the establishment.
  • Encourage workers who are sick to stay home.
  • Provide all workers with appropriate and required protective equipment, and ensure their use.
  • Consider whether disposable gloves are a valuble supplement to hand-washing.
  • Face coverings are strongly recommended when employees are in proximity to others.
  • Post signage to remind the public to use face coverings and to practice physical distancing.

Unique cleaning and disinfecting protocols are established for each industry. Employers should review the requirements for their industry and incorporate these best practices into their return-to-work plans.

Guidelines for physical distancing were established for each industry. Again, employers should review the requirements for their industry and incorporate them into their plans.

The following subsections guide you through the required planning and steps to safely return your employees to work. The guidelines take into consideration California's requirements and advisories, including Cal/OSHA, as well as those of the CDC and OSHA.


PRE-RETURN PLANNING

Prior to returning employees to work on-site, employers must define a new normal by creating or revising policies to address: critical workplace injuries; general health and safety; employee relations; and benefits. Employers should consider what physical modifications might be required, what personal protective equipment might be required and ways to ensure that modifications are made prior to employees returning to work, such as procuring protective equipment in advance.

Some workers who were not eligible for and have not taken advantage of the paid leave benefits under the Families First Coronavirus Response Act might have to avail themselves of the benefits after they return to work. Businesses should plan for absences and disruptions as everyone readjusts.

REVIEW GUIDELINES ON EMPLOYEE HEALTH AND SAFETY

OSHA and Cal/OSHA require employers to provide their employees with a workplace free from “recognized hazards causing or likely to cause death or serious physical harm ....” [1] Cal/OSHA’s standards are more detailed. For example, most businesses in California are aware that they must establish, implement and maintain an effective injury and illness prevention program (IIPP). It requires employers to: identify and correct workplace hazards, and to communicate them to employees; ensure that employees comply with the policy; investigate injuries and illnesses; and provide training when necessary [2]. In the past, businesses have drafted and posted such policies with little need to update or change them. In the post-restricted world, however, businesses are advised to review and update their IIPPs.

OSHA and Cal/OSHA provide detailed standards applicable to specific industries. For example, health-care and related industries must abide by Cal/OSHA’s aerosol transmissible diseases (ATD) standard. A detailed analysis of specific industry standards is beyond the scope of this guide, so employers should consult the websites for OSHA and Cal/OSHA for guidance related to particular industries:

Adhering to governmental guidelines and recommendations, and developing workplace policies around them, can help employers avoid employee claims of unsafe working conditions. And adherence can encourage workers to return to the workplace knowing that their employer cares about their health and safety.

California has issued industry-specific guidance to enable companies to provide a safe, clean environment for returning workers. See the subsection above, Gov. Newsom's Plan to Reopen the State. The guidance is not intended to revoke or repeal any employee rights, and is not exhaustive, as it doesn't reflect county health orders. It's not a substitute for existing safety and health-related regulations per OSHA, Cal/OSHA or the CDC. The guidance should be considered and implemented whenever possible as part of a company's return-to-work plan, mindful of what the other agencies advise.

ESTABLISH RETURN-TO-WORK POLICIES AND PROCEDURES

The first step is to evaluate the workplace and establish effective policies and procedures to ensure that they reduce the potential for coronavirus exposure and spread. In addition, consideration must be given to handling employees who are diagnosed with COVID-19. Many essential businesses that remained open during the stay-at-home order grappled with this reality, and their experience informs current best practices. Creating a safe workplace is an essential first step to assure employees that returning to work is safe.

California's industry-specific guidance suggests that each return-to-work plan or policy be work site-specific, which requires risk assessments and careful review of the work site. Pay close attention to high-traffic areas, socially distancing employees, whether use of PPE is necessary, how and where to clean and disinfect, and industry-specific employee training.

Given the new reality of business that will include, among other things, remote work, testing, monitoring, social distancing and the use of personal protective equipment, all California employers should review their employee handbooks to ensure they are up to date.

ASSESS RISK AND EXPOSURE

OSHA instructs employers to determine the risk of exposure in their workplaces. Given the relatively easy transmission of the virus, all workplaces should consider COVID-19 to be a foreseeable risk. The level of risk depends on several factors, including:

  • the type of industry;
  • the need for close contact with individuals known or suspected of having the virus; and
  • the frequency and/or duration of contact with such individuals.

Examples of industries that would be considered high risk of exposure include health-care facilities and first response agencies. Medium exposure businesses might include establishments open to the general public, such as grocery stores, retail outlets and schools. Low risk industries might include most office environments and others that have minimal contact with the public. Workers in the lowest risk category include those who telework, and perhaps workers in the home delivery business, where contact exposure has been reduced by changing practices.

DETERMINE PROTECTIVE AND PREVENTIVE MEASURES

After determining the level of risk from high to low, employers should evaluate what measures they can implement to protect employees in their specific work sites and industries. Protective measures could include construction or engineering changes, administrative changes and workplace practices and controls.

Examples of construction and engineering changes:

  • erecting barriers between a retail employee and a customer;
  • adjusting cubicles or workspaces to provide higher walls and less face-to-face contact with co-workers;
  • modifying ventilation and airflow systems to circulate air more efficiently.

Examples of administrative changes:

  • strict enforcement of policies, such as staying at home when sick;
  • social distancing employees physically and with flexible or staggered work hours and the use of technology to limit face-to-face meetings;
  • flexibility with teleworking arrangements;
  • revising travel policies; and
  • use of personal protective equipment, including masks and face shields.

Examples of workplace changes:

  • providing temperature and symptom-screenings for all workers, visitors, vendors and others entering the workplace;
  • providing sufficient hand-sanitizing stations;
  • cleaning frequently touched surfaces (kitchen counters, cafeteria tables and chairs, etc.) often and thoroughly with disinfectant: and
  • providing and permitting employees to use personal protective equipment and wash their hands frequently.

Different industries and businesses require different approaches. Tailor all policy and procedure changes to the needs of your organization with guidance from the state of California, Cal/OSHA, CDC, OSHA and advice from your employment attorney.

ESTABLISH POLICIES AND PRACTICES TO IMPLEMENT PROTECTIVE AND PREVENTIVE MEASURES

After evaluating risk and protective measures, employers should establish policies and practices in writing. In California, such practices should be included in the IIPP and in handbook policies distributed to all employees. OSHA, Cal/OSHA and the CDC recommend, among other measures, practices that apply across industries:

  • Promote frequent hand-washing and discourage the shared use of materials and spaces.
  • Require the use of face coverings by all employees, vendors and visitors who enter the facility.
  • Train employees on cough and sneeze etiquette, hand hygiene and not to touch their faces.
  • Stagger breaks and meal periods to minimize employee interaction, particularly in break rooms.
  • Provide employees with tissues, hand sanitizers and no-touch trash bins.
  • Routinely clean and disinfect shared workspace equipment and furniture.

Employers should train employees about the proper use of personal protective equipment, and instruct them on how to identify COVID-19 symptoms. They should require workers to report if they develop any symptoms. Policies should include not only self-monitoring, but self-quarantining and isolation practices to prevent the spread of the virus should an employee become infected. Industries at higher risk might implement a temperature monitoring program. Many essential businesses have established these practices, and other employers might want to implement them in advance of reopening.

Employers should advise employees about available sick leave, vacation or paid time off should they, or a family member, become ill or quarantined at the advice of a health-care provider.

The CDC includes many examples of specific measures businesses can take to protect their employees and reduce transmission of the virus. Consult the guidelines when drafting your policies and procedures.

ESTABLISH SCREENING PROCEDURES IF NECESSARY

Screening might include taking temperatures as employees arrive for work each day. But the practice must comply with the California Consumer Privacy Act (CCPA). (See the subsection above: FAQs –– Disability and Reasonable Accommodations.) According to the Equal Employment Opportunity Commission, any screening or testing measures employers take should be accurate, reliable and mindful of ”the incidence of false positives or false negatives with a particular test.” The EEOC notes that accurate testing reveals only if the virus is present; a negative test does not indicate if an individual previously might have exposed someone else or the likelihood that he or she will contract the virus later. The state of California, in issuing its industry-specific guidance, has recommended temperature and/or symptom-screening prior to the start of each employee's shift.

Employers who want to implement COVID-19 testing should:

  • Screen all employees entering the work site. Employers may not discriminate.
  • Require employees to consent in writing to the screening. The consent should explain how test results will be used and how results will be stored per the CCPA.
  • Limit the scope of screening to COVID-19 –– unnecessarily broad tests are illegal and invite claims of HIPAA or ADA violation.
  • Retain all testing results as confidential medical records per ADA requirements.
  • Know that some employees might have a medical condition requiring accommodation for an alternative testing method (for example, instead of a nasal swab).
  • Have a plan for handling an employee's refusal to submit to a test. It might include barring access to the work site.
  • Know that wage-and-hour laws require pay to nonexempt employees for testing time, including awaiting the results if the employee is not admitted before the results are known.
  • Require use of face coverings for all employees, vendors and visitors entering the facility.
  • Determine when and under what conditions an employee who tests positive for COVID-19 will be able to return to the workplace. Is a subsequent negative test sufficient? Two subsequent negative tests?
  • Know how to address potential workplace exposure if someone tests positive, especially if the worker was on-site in the days before the test.

Note: The California Department of Fair Employment and Housing has not issued guidelines for the use of COVID-19 diagnostic tests, although it has approved the nondiscriminatory practice of temperature-taking. California employers are strongly advised to consult their employment attorneys before implementing a testing program.

COMMUNICATE THE PLAN TO EMPLOYEES AND ANTICIPATE CHALLENGES

Once the plan has been devised, communicate it in writing to employees. Many might be anxious and wonder when returning to work will be possible, and under what conditions. Some also might challenge the plan or even the employer's request to return to work. Some might be concerned about safety, and seek protection under OSHA, Cal/OSHA or the National Labor Relations Board. Be prepared to address employee concerns, and communicate any changes or updates to the plan with dispatch. Even if the company hasn't reopened and employees are working remotely, it's important that they know the company has a well-considered plan to reopen and, when it's time, that employees can return safely. Encourage feedback and incorporate employee suggestions into the plan when it makes sense.


TRAIN EMPLOYEES

It isn't enough simply to distribute to employees the return-to-work plan. They must understand its importance, and be trained to adhere to its directives. They must understand the rationale for certain requirements such as temperature checks and the use of PPE, how to prevent the spread of COVID-19, how to recognize its symptoms and what to do if they are infected. Reinforce their responsibilities to socially distance and to properly clean and disinfect their workspace. Make sure they understand the employer's plan to clean and disinfect high-traffic areas. Employees should be trained not only about their expected conduct, but how the business intends to manage vendors, visitors and others who enter the work site.

Workers should be assured that the employer has established a safe work site. Employers should be prepared to retrain employees as conditions change and the plan is revised.

A well thought-out plan, proper distribution of it and training to promote compliance help protect employers against OSHA or Cal/OSHA complaints of unsafe working conditions.

COMMUNICATE THE PLAN TO VENDORS AND OTHER IMPORTANT ON-SITE PERSONNEL

Communication with vendors, suppliers and other on-site personnel helps to satisfy a company's key business partners that it has embraced guidance from the state, CDC and OSHA in devising and implementing the plan. Communicating with them before implementing it demonstrates attention to their concerns. Although no plan will be satisfactory to everybody, listening to concerns from your partners will solidify relationships and help to craft a workable, final plan for all.


ACTIVELY ASSESS AND MONITOR POLICY COMPLIANCE

It's critical that employers not only implement policies and practices but monitor them to ensure they remain effective as the situation changes. That effort might include training, retraining, observing, inspecting, updating policies and practices and correcting hazards and noncompliant behaviors. All efforts should be documented thoroughly should there be a complaint to OSHA or Cal/OSHA, if either agency inspects the facilities or to defend against discrimination or whistleblower claims.

AMEND POLICIES AND PRACTICES –– BE FLEXIBLE

As the pandemic unfolds and we learn more about the virus –– how it spreads, who is most likely to be infected severely, treatment options and vaccines –– employers must remain vigilant and flexible in how they react.

If a second wave of illness occurs, or additional guidelines are released, employers should adapt, and revise workplace policies with dispatch.


REBUTTABLE PRESUMPTION THAT COVID-19 ILLNESS IS WORK RELATED

On May 6, 2020, Gov. Newsom issued Executive Order N-62-20 creating a temporary workers' compensation presumption for employees diagnosed with COVID-19. The governor explained that the order was signed to "remov[e] a burden for workers on the front lines, who risk their own health and safety to deliver critical services to our fellow Californians so that they can access benefits, and be able to focus on their recovery."[3]

The presumption is retroactive to the date of the stay-at-home order and will remain in effect for 60 days after its effective date. So the presumption is effective for employees working from March 19, 2020 through July 5, 2020.

Under the order, any illness related to COVID-19 is presumed to arise out of and in the course of the employment for purposes of awarding workers’ compensation benefits if:

  1. The employee tested positive for or was diagnosed with COVID-19 within 14 days after a day that he or she performed labor or services at the employee’s place of employment at the employer’s direction.
  2. The day on which the employee performed labor or services at the employee’s place of employment at the employer’s direction was on or after March 19, 2020.
  3. The employee’s place of employment was not the employee’s home or residence. And
  4. The diagnosis was done by a physician who holds a physician and surgeon license issued by the California Medical Board, and that diagnosis is confirmed by further testing within 30 days.

So, the presumption covers any employees who must work outside of their homes during the stay-at-home order at the employer’s direction. All essential workers who were required to report to work are covered, but the presumption also covers nonessential workers who performed "labor or services at the employee’s place of employment at the employer’s direction." The presumption would not cover employees who went to their place of employment without their employer's direction.

The diagnosis must be confirmed by a test. Two types of tests generally are available: (1) a viral test, which determines if a person has a current infection; and (2) an antibody test, which determines if a person had a previous infection. The executive order doesn't limit the type of test that may be used to confirm the diagnosis. So, an employee who recovered from COVID-19 potentially could bring a claim for any benefits related to the infection using an antibody test, provided that the positive test was obtained within 30 days of the initial diagnosis.

The presumption is rebuttable and may be controverted by "other evidence."[4] So, under the executive order, an employer could rebut the presumption with any evidence that the employee contracted COVID-19 outside of the employment.

Employers are encouraged to review the guidance, discussed below, issued by OSHA related to the investigation that must be conducted to determine whether an employee's COVID-19 is work related for purposes of legally mandated recording. Such an investigation also would be useful to rebut the presumption that a COVID-19 illness contracted by an employee is work related for purposes of qualifying for workers' compensation benefits.

This issue is covered extensively in this guidebook's Workers' Compensation section, Covid-19 Presumptions.


OSHA AND CAL/OSHA RECORDING AND REPORTING REQUIREMENTS

Most employers with 10 or more employees are required to record certain injuries or illnesses under OSHA and Cal/OSHA. Even if a business is exempt from the record-keeping requirement, all employers must report certain serious injuries or illnesses. To determine which employers are subject to record keeping under OSHA, see https://www.osha.gov/recordkeeping/ and under Cal/OSHA, https://www.dir.ca.gov/dosh/etools/recordkeeping/index.html.

When employers record injuries and illnesses, the information usually is reported to OSHA or Cal/OSHA only as statistics. Either agency may request additional information. In California, covered injuries and illnesses are recorded on Form 300 –– Log of Work-Related Injuries and Illness. An in-depth review of OSHA and Cal/OSHA reporting requirements is beyond the scope of this guide. Employers are encouraged to review the OSHA and Cal/OSHA websites for further details on record keeping and reporting.

It's not easy to determine whether COVID-19 must be recorded or reported, as clear guidance has not emerged and it can be impossible to know if someone contracted the virus at the workplace.


RECORDABLE INCIDENTS

Cal/OSHA and OSHA agree that employers must record cases of COVID-19 only if all of these apply:

  • The case is confirmed as COVID-19.
  • The case is work related, as defined by 29 C.F.R. § 1904.5.
  • The case involves one or more of the general recording criteria defined in 29 C.F.R. § 1904.7 (that is, medical treatment beyond first aid, or days away from work).

Cal/OSHA follows OSHA guidelines with respect to when COVID-19 is considered to be a confirmed case –– when an individual has at least one respiratory specimen that tested positive https://www.osha.gov/memos/2020-04-10/enforcement-guidance-recording-cases-coronavirus-disease-2019-covid-19.

An illness is work related “if an event or exposure in the work environment either caused or contributed to the resulting condition ....” [5] The regulation defines several exceptions for illnesses that occur in the work environment, but are not work related. One notable such exception is an illness that “involves signs or symptoms that surface at work but result solely from a non-work-related event or exposure that occurs outside the work environment” [6] –– such illness is not recordable. But determining where, when and how an individual contracted COVID-19 is nearly impossible, and Cal/OSHA does not provide clear guidance.

For cases in which “it is not obvious whether the precipitating event or exposure occurred in the work environment or occurring away from work,” the employer “must evaluate the employee’s work duties and environment” to determine work relatedness.[7] That means employees in a high-risk environment –– a hospital or first response agency –– are more likely to become infected through work than an office worker who is teleworking. If multiple employees contract the illness, of course, it's more likely that the infection was contracted at work.

On May 19, OSHA issued updated guidance to assist employers' investigations into whether the illness is work related. Link here for the full text of the guidance. In determining whether an employer complied with its recording requirements, OSHA considers the reasonableness of its investigation into work relatedness. The guidance recognizes that employers don't know everything about their employees and are not medical experts, and recommends that they follow these steps when they learn of a COVID-19 case:

  1. Ask the employee how he or she believes they contracted the illness.
  2. Discuss with the employee, mindful of privacy concerns, the activities both inside and outside of work that may have led to the illness. And
  3. Review the employee's work environment for potential COVID-19 exposure.

The workplace review will focus mainly on the number of workers who have contracted COVID-19. OSHA also will investigate whether the employer has implemented and enforced policies and practices to address the spread of the disease in the workplace, including whether the employer considered guidance issued from the CDC. OSHA will consider information and evidence readily available to the employer when it made the determination of work relatedness. If the employer later learns more information about the employee's illness, OSHA may consider this information to evaluate whether the employer made a reasonable work-relatedness determination.

OSHA will look at different types of information that might show that the illness is or is not work related. Examples of likely work relatedness include:

  • Several workers develop the illness who work closely together and there is no other explanation.
  • The illness is contracted shortly after a lengthy, close exposure to a particular customer, vendor or co-worker who has a confirmed case and there is no other explanation.
  • The employee's job duties include frequent, close exposure to the general public in a place where there is ongoing community transmission and there is no other other explanation.

Examples of nonwork relatedness include:

  • The employee is the only worker in the vicinity to contract the illness and the employee's job duties don't include frequent contact with the public.
  • Outside the workplace, the employee closely and frequently associated with someone who has COVID-19 and who is not an employee.

Finally, OSHA will review evidence of causation from the employee, the employee's health-care providers and public health authorities when such information is available.

If, after making a reasonable inquiry under the factors outlined above, an employer cannot determine if it's more likely then not that the COVID-19 illness is work related, the employer needn't record it. The key for employers is to conduct a reasonable, thorough and objective evaluation of work relatedness, then to make the appropriate determination.

Practice Tip: Employers should document the steps they took to investigate work relatedness to ensure that they reviewed:

  1. the employee's explanation of where he or she thought the illness might have been contracted;
  2. current illness in the workplace, especially in the employee's work area;
  3. populations (general public) and individuals (customers, vendors, suppliers, etc.) with whom the employee regularly had contact prior to developing the illness;
  4. the effectiveness of the company's health and safety policies; and
  5. if and how the virus is spreading within the community.

Practice Tip: A thorough investigation could help limit exposure in subsequent unsafe workplace allegations, and limit the employer's workers' compensation exposure.


REPORTABLE INCIDENTS

Cal/OSHA requires that employers report by telephone within eight hours "any serious injury or illness, or death, of an employee occurring in a place of employment or in connection with any employment."[8] Cal/OSHA defines "serious injury or illness" as "any injury or illness occurring in a place of employment or in connection with any employment that requires inpatient hospitalization for other than medical observation or diagnostic testing...." [9] The critical inquiry for reporting purposes is whether COVID-19 was contracted "in a place of employment or in connection with any employment" and, for reporting purposes, required "inpatient hospitalization."

Given the confusing and conflicting guidance, a prudent California business should make the telephone report, or at least seek advice from a Cal/OSHA intake officer about whether the infection is reportable. Deciding if the illness was work related has far-reaching consequences, so the decision should be made in consultation with an experienced OSHA attorney and/or a workers’ compensation attorney. By taking some action, a California business might avoid an OSHA citation or penalties.


POTENTIAL CONSEQUENCES OF NONCOMPLIANCE WITH OSHA AND CAL/OSHA REQUIREMENTS

OSHA and Cal/OSHA have inspection and audit rights, and also the authority to impose significant penalties. They can even shut down a business. These are all possible consequences of noncompliance:

  • OSHA and Cal/OSHA inspections resulting from employee complaints or reports of serious illness or injury (possibly including multiple incidents of workplace COVID-19);
  • stop-work orders and red tags if an inspection finds imminent hazards;
  • Cal/OSHA monetary penalties of more than $10,000 without penalty enhancements for a "serious" citation;
  • criminal liability (See https://www.dir.ca.gov/dosh/Enforcementpage.htm).

Civil lawsuits brought by employees for unsafe working conditions or retaliation for making health and safety complaints also might result from an employer's failure to take seriously its responsibility to assess risk, determine best practices to protect the health and safety of employees and implement effective policies and practices.


RETALIATION IS PROHIBITED

The COVID 19 pandemic probably will prompt an uptick in workplace health and safety complaints. Employers should be cautious in how they respond to such employee actions. Taking adverse action against any employee because he or she made a health and safety complaint could be considered retaliatory.

Employees who make a good-faith oral or written complaint about their workplace safety to the employer, the employee’s representative (a union rep) or governmental agencies are protected from retaliation even if the complaint turns out to be unfounded.[10]

Practice Tip: Employers should consider how they respond to an employee who wants to stay home because he or she fears that the workplace is unsafe. If you believe that you have implemented policies and procedures that comply with OSHA, Cal/OSHA and CDC guidelines, you may choose to tell the employee that the leave is not authorized. But do so with caution. If you are uncertain that your policies and procedures are fully compliant with federal and state guidelines, you might want to approve the absence. If you grant one employee's request, however, you might be required to grant all such requests. Granting the employee’s request to stay home might be the best response, especially if the workplace has a high risk of exposure, multiple employees have contracted COVID-19 and/or the individual making the request is at higher risk of developing complications from the illness.


CONSIDER ESTABLISHING A PANDEMIC COORDINATOR OR PANDEMIC TEAM

The American Medical Association believes that there's a 75% chance of a second wave of COVID-19 cresting in the summer or fall https://www.ama-assn.org/delivering-care/public-health/what-s-ahead-covid-19-expert-offers-forecast-summer-fall.

Now is the time to develop contingency plans to deal with a potential second stay-at-home order or enhanced social distancing requirements.

An employer's return-to-work plans might include designating a pandemic coordinator and/or team with defined roles and responsibilities for proper response. The size of the team and its responsibilities should reflect the level of risk the business faces from potential or actual COVID-19 exposure. As explained above, certain businesses are considered a very high risk, while others are low risk. So, at a hospital, almost all employees might be members of the pandemic team. In an office setting, a single pandemic coordinator probably would suffice. Employers should invite staff members with expertise and awareness of equal employment opportunity laws to be on the team, or at least consulted in the planning. If the business is large enough, employees with disabilities should be included in planning discussions.

Employers are not allowed to ask an employee to disclose if he or she might be more vulnerable to complications from COVID-19, or to question whether the worker has a compromised immune system or a chronic health condition. But an employer probably can identify which employees might not be available for work during a pandemic by making inquiries that are not related to disability. An inquiry is not disability related if its purpose is to identify potential nonmedical reasons for absence during a pandemic. For example, an employer may ask about the effect if public transportation is unavailable during a pandemic. Such nonmedical inquiries should be structured so that the employee can answer "yes" or "no" without specifying what applies only to him or her. The answer need not be anonymous. The EEOC has an ADA-compliant pre-pandemic employee survey for making proper medical information requests https://www.eeoc.gov/facts/pandemic_flu.html. Here it is:

Directions: Answer yes to the whole question without specifying the factor that applies to you. Simply check "yes" or "no" at the bottom of the page.

In the event of a pandemic, would you be unable to come to work because of any of these reasons:

  1. If schools or daycare centers were closed, you would need to care for a child.
  2. If other services were unavailable, you would need to care for other dependents.
  3. If public transportation were sporadic or unavailable, you would be unable to travel to work. and/or
  4. If you or a member of your household falls into one of the categories identified by the CDC as being at high risk for serious complications from the pandemic influenza virus, you would be advised by public health authorities not to come to work (for example, pregnant women; persons with compromised immune systems due to cancer, HIV, history of organ transplant or other medical conditions; persons less than 65 years of age with underlying chronic conditions; or persons over 65).

Answer: Yes _____ No _____

Employers concerned about staffing levels in the event of a second wave of the illness should consider implementing a similar survey. If you intend to deviate from the approved EEOC model you are strongly encouraged to consult employment counsel to ensure that the survey is not discriminatory and that you are not inadvertently violating disability or privacy rights of employees.


PAYCHECK PROTECTION PROGRAM AND LOAN FORGIVENESS

The Paycheck Protection Program (PPP) is a complicated law. This guidebook does not describe or summarize all of its requirements, and certain provisions have been changed and updated a couple of times to make it more flexible for borrowers. This is a summary as of June 5, 2020 of the salient terms for loan forgiveness. Businesses should read the requirements and direct questions to their lender.

General Terms of the Paycheck Protection Program

Borrowers have 24 weeks from the disbursement of their loan to use the PPP funds, or until Dec. 31, 2020, when the program is set to end. This is an extension from the original eight weeks borrowers had to use PPP funds.

The maturity date for any portion of the PPP loan not forgiven has been extended by recent legislative action from two years to five years.

Payroll taxes may be deferred until the borrower's loan is forgiven.

Borrowers have until Dec. 31 to rehire laid-off or furloughed employees if they are seeking loan forgiveness. This is a revision from the original date of June 30 to rehire workers. See the subsection below, Steps to Rehiring Workers for Loan Forgiveness, for guidance on rehiring.

The program also was revised to permit borrowers to spend 60% instead of 75% of the funds on payroll costs as described below.

Use of Paycheck Protection Program Proceeds

Borrowers must use 60% of their PPP payroll funds for:

  • salaries and wages (capped at $100,000 per employee; payroll costs may not exceed eight weeks of compensation an owner/operator or self-employed individual/general partner received in 2019, capped at $15,385);
  • payments for vacation, parental, family medical or sick leave;
  • severance payments;
  • payments for the provision of group health-care benefits, including insurance premiums;
  • retirement benefits; and/or
  • state and local taxes assessed on employee compensation.

The remaining 40% of the PPP proceeds may be spent on:

  • interest on any debt or mortgage obligation whether for real or personal property that existed prior to Feb. 15, 2020;
  • rent under a lease agreement in force before Feb. 15, 2020;
  • utility payments including electricity, gas, water, transportation, telephone and internet access for which service began before Feb. 15, 2020.

Businesses that use more than 40% of the loan proceeds for purposes other then payroll costs will have to repay the amount spent and could be subject to additional charges imposed by the Small Business Administration (SBA).

Loan Forgiveness in General

The borrower must submit an application for loan forgiveness. In assessing eligibility, the lender will determine how the funds were spent in an eight-week period called "the covered period." The PPP loan forgiveness application is here: https://home.treasury.gov/system/files/136/3245-0407-SBA-Form-3508-PPP-Forgiveness-Application.pdf

Steps to Rehiring Workers for Loan Forgiveness

New guidance from the Small Business Administration and the Department of the Treasury informs PPP borrowers how to make rehire offers in order to comply with the requirements of loan forgiveness: https://home.treasury.gov/system/files/136/PPP-IFR-Loan-Forgiveness.pdf.

Loan forgiveness requires businesses to:

  1. Provide the laid-off or furloughed employee an offer in writing to return to work.
  2. Offer the same salary, wages and number of hours the employee had prior to layoff or furlough.
  3. Receive a rejection of that offer.
  4. Document the offer and the rejection.
  5. Notify the California Employment Development Department (EDD) within 30 days that the offer was rejected.

Documentation is important. The employee's rejection of the offer needn't be in writing, but employers must document receipt of an oral rejection. Because the offer to return must include the same hours, salary or wage as the employee's prior work, employers should spell out the prior terms of employment and clearly state that the employee will be returning under those terms and conditions.

The guidance clarifies that there is no reduction in loan forgiveness if employees:

  • voluntarily resign;
  • voluntarily request and receive a reduction in hours; or
  • are fired for cause.

So all employee separations must be documented fully ,including the reason for separation and its date.

Partial Loan Forgiveness

Employers may rehire fewer workers or rehire workers with reduced hours and pay, but they will not be able to claim 100% loan forgiveness under those circumstances.

If a business rehires fewer employees, the reduction in loan forgiveness is determined by a complex formula. It's calculated by multiplying the amount of forgiveness by a fraction whose numerator is the borrower's average number of full-time equivalent (FTE) employees during the eight-week covered period. The denominator is either: (a) the borrower's average number of full-time equivalent employees between Feb. 15, 2019 and June 20, 2019; or (b) the borrower's average number of full-time equivalent employees between Jan. 1, 2020 and Feb. 29, 2020. Most borrowers may choose whichever is lower.

The application clarifies that average full-time equivalent employees should be calculated on a weekly basis based on a 40-hour workweek. Alternatively, borrowers may simplify the calculation by treating all employees who work 40 hours or more per week as one (1) and all other employees who work fewer than 40 hours per week as 0.5 FTE.

If a business reduces wages, the amount of loan forgiveness if the employees who made less than $100,000 in annualized wages in 2019 receive a reduction in pay of more than 25% during the covered period. The calculation of the salary reduction is complicated; it's outlined in detail in the PPP Schedule A worksheet attached to the application. The worksheet compares each employee's salary/wages during the covered period to the employee's wages/salaries between Jan. 1, 2020 and March 31, 2020.

A reduction in the number of employees or in wages/salaries can be cured and won't reduce the amount of loan forgiveness if, by June 30, 2020, the borrower eliminates the reduction in employees or the reduction in wages.

Note: There is no requirement that the employer rehire the same employees –– restoring the same number of employees is sufficient. The application clarifies that borrowers must increase their FTE employees' pay equivalent to what they paid in the period that included Feb. 15, 2020. Employers who have benefited from PPP loans are advised to regularly review SBA and Treasury guidance to ensure that they are meeting all requirements.

FAQs ON RETURN TO WORK

Relaxed Stay-at-Home Orders

After stay-at-home orders are lifted, may we ask an employee to stay home or leave work if he or she exhibits symptoms of COVID-19 or the flu?

Yes. Lifted stay-at-home orders do not mark the end of the pandemic. The CDC states that employees who exhibit symptoms of influenzalike illness during a pandemic should leave the workplace. And employers should continue to monitor their workforces for symptoms and not allow symptomatic individuals to physically return to work until cleared by a medical provider.

May an employee refuse to return to work if a stay-at-home order is lifted?

Employees may refuse to return to work only if they believe they are in imminent danger. OSHA defines “imminent danger” to include “any conditions or practices in any place of employment which are such that a danger exists which can reasonably be expected to cause death or serious physical harm immediately or before the imminence of such danger can be eliminated through the enforcement procedures otherwise provided by this Act.”[11] The threat must be immediate or imminent and the employee must believe that death or serious physical harm could occur within a short time. For example, requiring employees to work with patients in a medical setting without PPE might meet this threshold. But if an employer has: followed CDC, OSHA and state return-to-work guidelines; performed a risk assessment; and developed a return-to-work plan focused on protecting employees and members of the public, most workplaces would not meet the factors required for an employee to refuse to work. Section 7 of the National Labor Relations Act (NLRA) extends broad statutory protections to employees to engage in “protected concerted activity for mutual aid or protection.” Such activity includes circumstances in which two or more employees act together to improve their employment terms and conditions, although it has been extended to individual action expressly undertaken on behalf of co-workers. Such action might include talking with one or more employees about working conditions, participating in a concerted refusal to work in unsafe working conditions and joining with co-workers to talk to the media about problems in the workplace. Employees generally are protected against discipline or discharge for engaging in such activity. Be mindful that if you terminate an employee who refuses to work, even if there is no imminent danger, the worker still might file an OSHA whistleblower claim. If you can establish that there was no imminent hazard to your employees and that your company complied with OSHA and CDC guidelines, the complaint might be dismissed. It's important, however, to treat employees fairly following any type of complaint even if it appears baseless. If you have any questions about how to handle employees who complain about unsafe work conditions or who refuse to return to work, contact us for advice.

May an employee refuse to return to work if he or she is older than 65 and feels unsafe?

Only if he or she reasonably believes there's an imminent danger per the OSHA standard. The CDC has identified older people as having higher risk of serious illness, so an employer should consider alternatives to requiring any higher-risk employees to return to work. It might consider teleworking, offering enhanced PPE (gloves, gowns, etc.) or changes in schedule. Employers should document all alternatives discussed and the employee's response.

After stay-at-home orders are lifted, may employers require workers to notify the company if they have been exposed to, have symptoms of and/or have tested positive for COVID-19?

Yes. Just because the orders have been lifted doesn’t mean that the pandemic has passed. Employers should have policies and plans notifying employees of their obligation to inform the company if they have symptoms of coronavirus, have been exposed to it or have tested positive. In addition, companies should have written policies about actions they will take in response to such disclosures.

Taking Employee Temperatures and Other Medical Tests

After employees return to work, may employers take their temperatures?

Yes. Until further notice, companies may continue to operate under the EEOC’s guidance, which confirms that measuring employees’ body temperatures is permissible. California employers must comply with the California Consumer Privacy Act (CCPA) and provide employees a CCPA compliant notice prior to or simultaneously with collection of this information. California guidance for the reopening of specific industries also permits employers to check for symptoms in addition to temperature.

If employers are not required to do so, should they take employee temperatures?

Maybe. The CDC recommends screening employees for fevers of more than 100.4 degrees, and California’s industry-specific guidelines recommend that temperatures be taken at the beginning of a shift or, if appropriate, allowing employees to take their own temperatures before beginning their shifts.

If employers decide to screen workers, they should also check the temperatures of guests, clients, vendors and contractors. Still, some individuals infected with COVID-19 will exhibit no symptoms, so temperature-screening probably will not prevent entry to the work site by everyone who might transmit the disease. Symptom-screening in combination with taking temperatures might provide a more complete sense of whether someone is infected.

Should employers collect medical information from employees when taking their temperatures?

It's not recommended unless required by local or state law. If an employer collects or distributes any medical information about an employee while conducting a pre-shift screening, the likelihood of a privacy-related claim is greater as it relates to data storage. Instead, using a real-time thermometer, employers should immediately inform workers privately if it measures greater than 100.4 degrees. If an employee exhibits symptoms or a fever, it's necessary to collect additional information for the purposes of contact-tracing. That includes the names of all employees or others on the work site with whom the worker has had close contact in order to notify them of possible exposure.

What precautions should be taken by individuals who conduct the temperature-screening of employees, customers, vendors or contractors?

Assume the tester potentially will be exposed to someone who is infected and who might cough or sneeze during their interaction. Determine how to eliminate or minimize the hazard, which might be to require the tester to use PPE.

What other best practices should employers follow during temperature-screening?

Maintain proper social distancing as employees and others wait to be tested. Businesses might mark the 6-feet interval for people standing in line. Some might create waiting areas where employees can maintain the proper distance prior to entering the facility.

Ensure that there is privacy during screening, especially when results are announced.

In California, employers are required to pay nonexempt employees for the time required to take their temperatures or assess symptoms. Employers should implement a clock-in system for employees awaiting screening.

Masks in the Workplace

May employers refuse an employee’s request to wear a medical mask or respirator?

Possibly, but under most circumstances, it's not recommended. Employers should allow their workers to wear reasonable PPE if it makes them feel safe. In most cases, employees returning to the work site should be asked to wear face masks and to socially distance. The CDC has issued guidance recommending the wearing of cloth face coverings in public settings especially where other social distancing measures are difficult to maintain. Employers should not refuse an employee’s request to wear a mask.

What should an employer do if an employee claims that he or she has a medical condition that prevents him or her from wearing a mask or face covering?

The employer should engage the worker in the ADA-required interactive process. That includes requesting medical certification from the employee’s treating physician sufficient to determine whether he or she has a disability that requires accommodation. If so, the employer may ask questions to determine whether there are options to wearing a face covering. Accommodations could include schedule changes, teleworking or leave.

A customer or guest claims to be exempt from face mask requirements due to an underlying medical condition, and refuses to provide further information. What should the business do?

Notice should be posted at the entrance of the facility and on the company's website that patrons are required to wear a face mask to enter the place of business, and that it reserves the right to refuse service to anyone not complying. Asking for medical documentation to prove the condition is not recommended. Don't engage in a discussion about whether he or she is exempt from the rule. Consider offering an accommodation to allow entry or other access to the business, such as curbside service. Maybe the business can permit entry another time if the customer wears a full clear face shield.

Should the employer pay for face coverings for employees to wear?

If a business requires employees to wear face coverings, it should pay for them as PPE.

Employment Handbooks, Policies and Best Practices

What policies might be affected or need to be revised due to the COVID-19 pandemic?

Employers might need to implement new measures to ensure the health and safety of employees. They might need to revise policies and practices to accommodate a new normal. Businesses should undertake a thorough analysis of existing policies in light of recent legislation. Some policies requiring revision might relate to:

  • vacation/paid time off
  • attendance
  • work hours, including start/stop time, breaks, lunch times, flexible/staggered work hours
  • time-keeping measures, including clock-in/clock-out procedures
  • leave policies, including sick leave
  • remote work
  • travel policies(business and personal)
  • information technology and usage

When employees return to work, may or should employers issue new policies and handbooks?

Employers who are not otherwise limited by a collective bargaining agreement may issue new policies or handbooks when returning employees to work. Indeed, it's a good opportunity to update everything in light of new legislation and best practices to minimize coronavirus transmission.

If employees have been on furlough, may they be called back to work, or must everyone be treated as a new hire?

In general, employees returning from furlough or temporary layoff needn't be rehired in the traditional sense. If employees stayed on the payroll, the business simply returns them to their prior positions. The business should document the return-to-work date via the usual personnel action form. If wages and benefits for returning employees have changed, they must be communicated in writing to the workers before they become effective.

What signage must businesses post in the workplace?

Employers are obligated to post numerous employment law-related posters in locations throughout their work sites. Every employer covered by the Families First Coronavirus Response Act (FFCRA) must post in a conspicuous place on its premises a notice of the statute requirements for expanded sick leave and expanded family leave. The requirement may be satisfied by emailing or mailing the notice to employees or posting it on the internal or external website.

Remote Work Considerations

What is involved if an an employer wants to continue the teleworking plan it devised during the stay-at-home order?

First, the business must assess its technological capabilities. Did it implement security and privacy protocols, or do they need to be added?

Second, the business must determine whether remote workers have the equipment required to do their jobs. Can the company ensure they will continue to have access to the proper equipment? Can it provide remote help-desk assistance on a long-term basis?

Third, how can the business effectively communicate with remote workers? Can they communicate with each other? How will time records be kept, and attendance tracked? How will overtime be monitored?

These considerations are especially important for nonexempt employees who must keep track of their time and attendance for wage-and-hour purposes.

How will productivity be measured?

Does the business need to reimburse employees for expenses? Does it require employees to use their own equipment? If so, it must reimburse them for expenses. For example, will the company pay a portion of an employee’s phone bill or internet charges?

Does the company have safety standards or practices for employees working remotely? Workers' compensation might be available for any injuries an employee suffers while working remotely. These issues are covered extensively in "Sullivan on Comp" Chapter 5, and addressed in this book's workers' compensation section, Injuries While Working at Home.

Businesses must draft a robust remote work policy or review its existing policy to determine if it needs updating. A remote work policy must accommodate the organization’s expectations of the workforce, and that might require separate policies for exempt and nonexempt employees.

When stay-at-home orders were enacted, businesses allowed remote work without a policy or procedure. Now that things have calmed down, should more formal remote work practices be implemented?

Yes. Each business keen to continue the remote work practice must develop a teleworking plan that addresses its needs after the crisis passes.

Return to Work and Leave Related to the Families First Coronavirus Relief Act and Family and Medical Leave Act

Does the Families First Coronavirus Relief Act still apply to rehired employees?

Yes. If a business recalls an employee any time before Dec. 31, 2020, and the worker claims to be unable to return because of one of the qualifying reasons for emergency paid sick leave benefits or emergency family and medical leave, under the FFCRA, he or she is entitled to the monetary benefits. If an employee returns to work, then requires emergency paid sick leave or expanded family rights leave, he or she is eligible for these benefits until Dec. 31, 2020.

If an employer rehires an employee, must he or she work for 30 days before becoming eligible for expanded family/medical leave?

Not necessarily. The FFCRA was amended to provide that if an employee was laid off or otherwise terminated on or after March 1, 2020, and rehired or otherwise re-employed on or before Dec. 31, 2020, the worker is entitled to expanded family/medical leave if he or she had been on the employer’s payroll for 30 or more of the 60 calendar days prior to the layoff or termination.

If rehiring employees brings an employer's workforce to 500 or more, may employees still request sick leave or expanded family/medical leave?

No. The 500 or more employee count is calculated at the time sick leave or expanded family/medical leave is requested. But if the workplace is in a county or city that has expanded these benefits to larger employers, employees would be eligible at that time.

If an employer hires a new employee as part of its return-to-work operations, and the worker used sick leave at the previous employer, is he or she entitled to another 80 hours of sick leave with the new company?

No. U.S. Department of Labor regulations specify that any person is limited to a total of 80 hours of sick leave. An employee who has taken some, but not all of those hours of sick leave, then changes employers, is entitled to the remaining hours from the new employer –– if the new employer is covered by the FFCRA.

If an operation was closed, and its employee requested pay for emergency sick leave, under the FFCRA may the business choose not to bring that worker back?

Although the employee was not qualified for FFCRA leave while the operation was closed, choosing not to bring an employee back based on his or her request for such leave could be viewed as discriminatory and retaliatory. The decision about who is invited to return to work should not be based on an employee’s request or potential need for FFCRA leave.

SEE ALSO


REFERENCES

  1. 29 U.S.C. 654(a)(1).
  2. California Code of Regulations, Title 8, section 3202(a))
  3. See the Governor's announcement of the executive order at https://www.gov.ca.gov/2020/05/06/governor-newsom-announces-workers-compensation-benefits-for-workers-who-contract-covid-19-during-stay-at-home-order/.
  4. Although the governor gave notice that the presumption could be rebutted only under "strict criteria," the executive order does not limit the evidence that may be used to rebut it. See Gov. Newsom's news conference of May 6, 2020 at https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=SbAuaffPIf4. The "strict criteria" remark occurs at the 5:00 mark in the video.
  5. California Code or Regulations, Title 8 section 14300(5)(a))
  6. California Code or Regulations, Title 8 section 14300(5)(b)(2)
  7. California Code or Regulations, Title 8 section 14300(5)(b)(3)
  8. California Code of Regulations, Title 8, section 342(a)
  9. California Code of Regulations, Title 8, section 330(h)
  10. California Labor Code 6310
  11. Federal Occupational Safety and Health Act of 1970 Section 13(a).

< Teleworking in Response to the Pandemic Table of Contents Appendix — Web Links For Local Safety Orders >

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