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Paid Family Leave Legislation Advances in House and Senate

Wayne Yoshioka

State lawmakers are on the verge of passing legislation for paid family leave in Hawai’i. If passed by the House and Senate, the governor is expected to sign the measure into law. HPR’s Wayne Yoshioka has this update on what it could mean for Hawai’i workers.

As currently proposed, the state would enact paid family leave for all Hawai’i workers in 2020 with the first payout made in 2022.   Hawai’i Working Families Coalition member, Deborah Zysman, says paid family leave has been discussed for at least a decade in Hawai’i and, for the first time, it’s being advanced beyond the conceptual stage.

 

Credit Wayne Yoshioka
Deborah Zysman, executive director, Hawai'i Children's Action Network and member of the Working Families Coalition.

“We are talking about maternity leave, paternity leave, adoption of a new child or any kind of family caretaking.  So if you have a very ill child – not like the cold or the flu – but a hospitalized child, a spouse or immediate family member that needs caretaking, which I think is a growing problem that we have.

 

Zysman, who is also the executive director of the Children’s Action Network, says the current model being proposed is a social insurance program paid into by workers.  The cost per worker would be one dollar a week or 57 dollars a year and will provide qualifying individuals up to 16 weeks of partial pay.  House Labor and Public Employment Committee chair, Aaron Ling Johanson, says the final decisions on structuring the program would be made by a paid family leave implementation board.

 

Credit Wayne Yoshioka
Rep. Aaron Ling Johanson, chair of House Labor and Public Employment Committee

“The method of approaching how to do that is through an implementation board that brings together the various sectors that are important constituencies.  So, small business, the departments, paid family leave advocates, the insurance industry and several others to pick the model that might work best for Hawai’i.”

 

Johanson, says paid family leave would be available only for qualified Hawai’i workers, and would not be an entitlement or public assistance program.   Senator Karl Rhoads, a strong supporter of the proposals, says there are numerous program models to follow.

 

Credit Wayne Yoshioka
Senator Karl Rhoads, chair of Water and Land Committee and supporter of paid family leave.

  

“The rest of the world is way ahead of us in this.  There’s only 3 countries in the world that really don’t have any paid family leave.  One of them is Swaziland, one of them is Papua New Guinea and the third one is the United States.  Everyone else has it.  Obviously, the same concerns are relevant in other countries and they’ve figured out a way to get around it and also manage to make business work.”

 

The States of California, Rhode Island, Washington, New Jersey and New York have insurance-based paid family leave.   Working Families Coalition member, Zysman, says paid family leave will help Hawai’i workers with local families or families on the mainland and provide enough money for food and rent.

 

“We know that in Hawai’i, so many families live paycheck to paycheck.  And what happens is, you have this kind of medical event in your family.  A new baby in the home or a sick family member and that’s actually the triggering event that forces people into poverty.”

 

The House version of the bill will be voted on by members of the Senate Ways and Means Committee Tuesday.  Wayne Yoshioka, HPR News.

Wayne Yoshioka
Wayne Yoshioka is an award-winning journalist who has worked in television, print and radio in Hawaiʻi. He also has been on both sides of politics as a state departmental appointee and political/government reporter. He covered Hurricane Iwa (1982) as a TV reporter; was the State Department of Defense/Civil Defense spokesperson for Hurricane Iniki (1992); and, commanded a public affairs detachment in Afghanistan (2006). He has a master's degree in Communication from the University of Hawaiʻi at Mānoa and is a decorated combat veteran (Legion of Merit, Bronze Star and 22 other commendation/service medals). He resides in Honolulu.
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