NewsFlash: Field poll finds voters are kindly

Loren Kaye's picture
President of the California Foundation for Commerce and Education

The most notorious workplace benefits bill of the year, AB 2716, will be considered by a key Senate committee today, and on behalf of supporters, the Field Research Corporation has released a doozy of a poll. By a three-to-one margin, voters support a state law to guarantee that workers receive a minimum number of sick days from their employer. Also, three-quarters of voters “are concerned” about the millions of estimated workers without paid sick days. Moreover, the same 75% - 25% margin finds voters believe paid sick day laws will significantly increase the cost of doing business and the costs will be passed on to customers.

So voters are basically a sympathetic bunch, and when asked they acknowledge that new benefits aren’t free. But the poll doesn’t ask what would be the only useful question: given a choice between a compassionate benefit and certain job losses or pay cuts, which is a higher priority?

But the most absurd finding in this poll was that three-quarters of voters also agreed with the statement that “paid sick days is a basic worker right, just like being paid a decent wage.” This measures rhetoric, not any useful public policy concept. By no stretch could sick leave be considered a “basic worker right.” Nor is minimum wage. Nor is overtime. Nor, for that matter, is a job. All of those are state-mandated benefits that our society has decided it is wealthy enough to provide. Freedom of speech is a right, so is freedom from government barging into your house without probably cause. Those have nothing to do with the wealth of a nation or bargaining power of workers.

Elevating negotiated worker benefits to the status of “rights” is obscene.

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