April 25, 2024

You’re the Boss Blog: Paid Sick Leave Has Some Business Owners Feeling Ill

The Agenda

How small-business issues are shaping politics and policy.

When the advocates at Family Forward Oregon sought to muster support among businesses in Portland for a local paid sick leave ordinance, they found a sympathetic ear in Tony Fuentes. Mr. Fuentes and his wife operate Milagros Boutique, which sells cloth diapers and clothing for babies and children on Portland’s northeast side.

“The idea that 80 percent of low-income workers don’t get a minute of protected time was not in line with my view of the country, or of the social compact,” Mr. Fuentes said, who testified in favor of the bill at a council hearing.

But to judge by the efforts of local business organizations in Portland and in New York City, which is poised to pass its own paid sick leave law, as well as from interviews with a handful of businesses, the more common response is hostility, or at least wariness.

Portland’s new law, which passed the City Council in March, follows a template set by a handful of other cities, and Connecticut, in the last seven years. (In Philadelphia, a similar proposal could not overcome a veto by the mayor.) Businesses with at least six employees have to provide one hour of paid sick leave for every 30 hours an employee works, up to 40 hours a year, as well as protect the employee’s job. Companies with five or fewer employees must offer the same amount of unpaid, job-protected time off. An employee must work at least 240 hours before becoming eligible. In Portland, the law takes effect in January.

Mr. Fuentes said that he already offered paid time off to all of his employees (the number fluctuates between five and seven). They can use the time for any purpose, he said, and he has found that offering the time has added just 1 percent to his total labor expense. “The costs are pretty minimal,” he said, “and, talking with other businesses in Portland doing the same thing, our costs are line with theirs.”

Because Mr. Fuentes has a paid time-off policy that is at least as generous as what the city will soon require for sick leave, he will not be affected by the new law. But whether a business owner supports the law does not necessarily turn on how much strain the law will put on the company. Family Forward Oregon also tried to press Lisa Schroeder, owner of Mother’s Bistro and Bar into service for paid sick leave. Ms. Schroeder also offers paid time off and may have seemed a promising candidate to be a public face for the measure, since she is well known for her liberal views on other issues. But Ms. Schroeder demurred.

“I believe in it,” she said. “However, in my business, there’s a lot of ‘brown bottle flu,’ so you have people who call in because they had a rough night the night before.” Ms. Schroeder said she offered paid sick leave in addition to vacation days for employees who are “legitimately sick” — “I have the right to reserve judgment” — and she had hoped the ordinance would require a doctor’s note, but others called that a hardship for employees.

In the end, she said, “I just chose to stay neutral and let the chips fall where they may.”

Debbie Kitchin, a contractor who runs Interworks, a Portland remodeling business, worries about the paperwork associated with the law. Ms. Kitchin provides paid time off for her three full-time workers, but not for her crew of part-timers, which this year has ranged from one to three — she said she wasn’t sure whether the law would require her to offer paid leave. (Lisa Frack, spokeswoman for Family Forward Oregon, said that question would be resolved when the rules to carry out the law are written this summer.)

“For some of our people that we’ve brought in part time, they might work 20 hours one week and four hours the next week,” she said. “And our payroll software doesn’t really track the benefits by cumulative hours. It tracks them by pay period, or by month, which adds to the cost.

“By itself, it’s not the end of the world. But do you know how many other things there are like this? It’s the cumulative effect of all these little things,” she continued. “In my field, there are contractors who not only won’t do this but don’t even pay payroll taxes, liability insurance. They don’t get licensing and bonding. So this is just one more burden to businesses that are trying to follow the rules.”

Ms. Kitchin, who testified against the ordinance in a council hearing, said that next year, she might rely on a staffing agency or have her current employees work longer hours rather than hire additional part-timers, though she acknowledged that both of these alternatives would add to her costs as well.

For businesses like Ms. Kitchin’s, the bill in New York City promises a somewhat lighter touch than the Portland ordinance. Should it become law — it is likely to come up for a vote in two weeks — only businesses with at least 20 employees will be required to offer paid leave when it takes effect in the spring of 2014. A year and a half later, the threshold will drop to 15 employees. Businesses with fewer employees would still have to offer unpaid leave and job protection.

Jason Chung, who owns a Key Food supermarket in Forest Hills, Queens, that employs about 35 people, called the proposal undue interference. “Lawmakers should leave those kinds of things to the business people,” he said. Mr. Chung does not offer paid sick leave or time off now, but, he said: “If somebody’s sick — they have a legitimate excuse, a doctor’s note — oftentimes we give them full pay. So we don’t have to be told to do it.”

When asked if the rule would raise his costs, Mr. Chung, who is considering opening a second store, paused. “Not as much as Obamacare,” he said. “But I know Obamacare will have a big impact on the business.”

Article source: http://boss.blogs.nytimes.com/2013/04/29/paid-sick-leave-has-some-business-owners-feeling-ill/?partner=rss&emc=rss

Common Sense: Sham Shareholder Democracy

It turns out there are many stronger cases — 41.

That’s the number of publicly traded companies where directors actually lost their elections last year, meaning that more than 50 percent of the shareholders withheld their votes of approval. Yet despite these resounding votes of no confidence, they remained in their posts.

At least at H.P., all the directors got a majority of the votes cast, and even then, two resigned and a third gave up his post as chairman. But at Cablevision Systems Inc., the New York cable and media company controlled by the Dolan family, three directors lost shareholder elections twice in the last three years — in 2010 and 2012 — and received only tepid support in 2011. Nonetheless, the three remain on the board.

“As fiduciaries, we can’t sit by and let the board make a mockery of our fundamental right to elect directors,” said New York City’s comptroller, John Liu, who oversees the city’s pension funds, which own more than 532,000 Cablevision shares. “Shareowners need accountable directors who will ensure the company isn’t being run for the benefit of insiders at our expense.”

Mr. Liu sent the company a letter earlier this month urging it not to nominate the three again and threatening a proxy fight. “The fact that all three directors remain on the board suggests that one of the few rights” afforded shareholders is “illusory,” he wrote. Mr. Liu warned that he’d oppose their election and that “my office will also encourage other shareholders to join us.”

Mr. Liu didn’t get a response, but a Cablevision spokesman told me this week, without being specific, that Mr. Liu’s letter was “woefully misinformed, inaccurate and political.” In proxy materials released by Cablevision this week, all three directors — Thomas V. Reifenheiser, John R. Ryan and Vincent S. Tese — were renominated for new terms.

Even directors who resign after losing votes don’t necessarily leave. Two directors of Chesapeake Energy in Oklahoma, V. Burns Hargis, president of Oklahoma State University, and Richard K. Davidson, the former chief executive of Union Pacific, were opposed by more than 70 percent of the shareholders in 2012. Chesapeake requires directors receiving less than majority support to tender their resignations, which they did. The company said it would “review the resignations in due course.” (After a shareholder outcry, Mr. Davidson left a month after the vote, but and Mr. Hargis only left last month.)

At Iris International, a medical diagnostics company based in Chatsworth, Calif., shareholders rejected all nine directors in May 2011. In keeping with the company’s policy, they submitted their resignations. And then they voted not to accept them. The nine stayed on the board. (The company was acquired in late 2012 by the Danaher Corporation.)

A list of companies retaining directors who were rejected by shareholders in 2012 — so-called zombie directors — was compiled by the Council of Institutional Investors, which represents pension funds, endowments and other large investors. The list includes not just smaller, family-controlled companies, where disdain for shareholder views may be more ingrained, but also Loral Space Communications, Mentor Graphics, Boston Beer Company, and Vornado Realty Trust.

“It’s appalling,” Nell Minow, a co-founder of GMI Ratings, which rates companies based on risk to shareholders, including corporate governance issues, told me this week. “It’s the No. 1 issue in corporate governance.” She noted that the reason such a thing is possible is that many companies operate under a “plurality” voting system, in which directors run unopposed and just one vote is enough to be elected. And even companies that require a majority vote may decline to accept a director’s resignation.

Article source: http://www.nytimes.com/2013/04/13/business/sham-shareholder-democracy.html?partner=rss&emc=rss

Sports Briefing | Boxing: Merchant Ends Run on HBO


Opinion »

Townies: Cinder Block New York City

What happens when you stop moving? The city grows around you.

Article source: http://www.nytimes.com/2012/12/14/sports/merchant-ends-run-on-hbo.html?partner=rss&emc=rss

Bucks Blog: Free ATMs Effort to Take the Fee Out Of Cash Withdrawals

A young New York entrepreneur has one word in response to complaints about high A.T.M. fees: Advertising.

Free ATMs NYC, brought to you by Clinton Townsend, 25, offers free withdrawals to all users. The catch? While you wait for your cash to be dispensed, a 15-inch screen on the machine plays an advertisement. Then, when you get your receipt, it will have a coupon for a discount, perhaps at a restaurant nearby.

Mr. Townsend said he wanted to install the machines in areas of New York City that the big banks were not serving and where independently operated A.T.M.’s charge as much as $3 per transaction. “We’re looking to eliminate that,” he said in a phone interview.

The idea of using A.T.M.’s as talking billboards isn’t new. But banks generally have used them to advertise their own products and services. Also, those A.T.M.s aren’t free if you don’t have an account at that bank. “Our A.T.M.s are free to everyone,” Mr. Townsend said.

The company’s first free A.T.M. just began operating at the Knitting Factory, a music club and bar in Brooklyn’s Williamsburg neighborhood. Mr. Townsend is subsidizing costs at this point, but the machine does display the calendar of events at the Knitting Factory, he said. (Transactions conducted at the machine are handled by WorldPay, a card payment processor). Mr. Townsend says he has had inquiries from third-party advertisers and thinks the idea can catch on.

Would you put up with advertising if it meant withdrawing your cash was free? Where would you like to see one of the A.T.M.’s?

Article source: http://feeds.nytimes.com/click.phdo?i=9aeeedc799345f893a1ad41579037f9d

An Airbnb Tour of New York City

Bed placement is not up to you when you stay at somebody’s apartment. Here, I was right next to the window and got an earful at 3:30 a.m. when the scavengers came around to pick over the recycling container in front of the building.

Article source: http://feeds.nytimes.com/click.phdo?i=eee252cc55cd521bf5080199156b3275

Business Briefing | TECHNOLOGY: Google’s Chairman to Testify Before a Senate Panel

Opinion »

Room for Debate: New York’s Highway Hell

If Los Angeles can shut down a freeway for repairs, why can’t New York City?

Article source: http://feeds.nytimes.com/click.phdo?i=c7bd22cb5a518cafd8f4e2a7df9aa230