Texas 2021 87th Regular

Texas House Bill HB284 Introduced / Bill

Filed 11/09/2020

                    87R242 KKR-F
 By: Collier H.B. No. 284


 A BILL TO BE ENTITLED
 AN ACT
 relating to requiring certain employers to provide paid leave to
 employees; providing civil and administrative penalties.
 BE IT ENACTED BY THE LEGISLATURE OF THE STATE OF TEXAS:
 SECTION 1.  Subtitle D, Title 2, Labor Code, is amended by
 adding Chapter 83 to read as follows:
 CHAPTER 83. EARNED PAID LEAVE
 Sec. 83.001.  DEFINITIONS. In this chapter:
 (1)  "Commission" means the Texas Workforce
 Commission.
 (2)  "Employee" means a person employed by an employer.
 The term does not include a person who is:
 (A)  an unpaid volunteer;
 (B)  an independent contractor; or
 (C)  a participant in a work-study program that
 provides employment opportunities for compensation or vocational
 training to students attending a secondary or post-secondary
 educational institution.
 (3)  "Employer" means a person who is engaged in an
 industry affecting commerce and who has 50 or more employees for
 each working day in each of 20 or more calendar weeks in the current
 or preceding calendar year.
 Sec. 83.002.  APPLICABILITY OF CHAPTER. This chapter does
 not apply to:
 (1)  an employee who is:
 (A)  entitled to unemployment benefits or
 allowances under the Railroad Unemployment Insurance Act (45 U.S.C.
 Section 351 et seq.);
 (B)  covered under the Railway Labor Act (45
 U.S.C. Section 151 et seq.); or
 (C)  employed by the employee's parent, spouse, or
 child; or
 (2)  an employer who is:
 (A)  a state agency or political subdivision, as
 those terms are defined by Section 21.002;
 (B)  an agency of the federal government; or
 (C)  a charitable or religious organization
 exempt from taxation under Section 501(c), Internal Revenue Code of
 1986.
 Sec. 83.003.  PAID LEAVE REQUIRED. (a) Each employer shall
 provide paid leave annually to each employee in this state under the
 terms of this chapter.
 (b)  Notwithstanding Subsection (a), an employer with not
 more than 75 employees is not required to provide paid leave under
 this chapter before the second anniversary of the date the employer
 hires the employer's first employee.
 Sec. 83.004.  PAID LEAVE ACCRUAL AND CARRYOVER. (a) Paid
 leave under this chapter accrues beginning on the date of hire:
 (1)  at a rate of one hour of paid leave for each 30
 hours worked by an employee; and
 (2)  up to a maximum of 40 hours per calendar year.
 (b)  Each employee is entitled to carry over not more than 40
 unused accrued hours of paid leave from the current calendar year to
 the following calendar year unless the employer elects to:
 (1)  pay the employee for any unused paid leave at the
 end of the year at the rate described by Section 83.007; or
 (2)  make available to the employee at the beginning of
 the year the entire amount of paid leave that the employee is
 expected to accrue during the year as provided by Section
 83.005(d).
 (c)  Leave hours carried over from a previous calendar year
 must be immediately available to the employee in the following
 calendar year.
 Sec. 83.005.  ENTITLEMENT TO USE PAID LEAVE; LIMITATIONS.
 (a) An employee is entitled to use accrued paid leave under this
 chapter 90 calendar days after the date of hire, unless the employer
 agrees to an earlier date.
 (b)  An employee is not entitled to use accrued paid leave
 under this chapter if the employee did not work an average of 18 or
 more hours a week for the employer in the most recent complete
 calendar year.
 (c)  An employee is not entitled to use more than 40 hours of
 accrued paid leave under this chapter in any calendar year.
 (d)  An employer may make immediately available to an
 employee at the beginning of a year, quarter, or other period the
 entire amount of paid leave that the employee is expected to accrue
 during the year, quarter, or other period.
 (e)  At the employer's discretion, an employer may loan paid
 leave time to an employee in advance of accrual by the employee.
 (f)  On the mutual consent of the employee and employer, an
 employee who chooses to work additional hours or shifts during the
 same or following pay period, instead of hours or shifts missed,
 does not use accrued paid leave.
 (g)  Unless an employee policy or collective bargaining
 agreement provides for the payment of accrued fringe benefits on
 termination, an employee is not entitled to payment of unused
 accrued paid leave under this chapter on termination of employment.
 Sec. 83.006.  EMPLOYER COMPLIANCE. (a) An employer is
 considered to be in compliance with this chapter if the employer
 offers one or more other types of paid leave that:
 (1)  may be used for any purpose; and
 (2)  accrues at a rate equal to or greater than the rate
 described by Section 83.004.
 (b)  For the purposes of this section, other types of paid
 leave include paid vacation, personal days, and paid time off.
 Sec. 83.007.  PAY RATE FOR LEAVE. (a) Each employer shall
 pay each employee for paid leave time taken at a pay rate equal to
 the normal hourly wage for that employee.
 (b)  For any employee whose hourly wage varies depending on
 the work performed by the employee, the normal hourly wage is
 considered to be the average hourly wage of the employee in the pay
 period preceding the pay period in which the employee uses paid
 leave.
 (c)  If an employee receives gratuity in the course of
 employment to the extent that the gratuity is considered wages in
 the computation of taxes under the Federal Unemployment Tax Act (26
 U.S.C. Section 3301 et seq.), the employee's normal hourly wage may
 not be less than the amount required by Section 62.051.
 (d)  If the employee's normal hourly wage cannot be
 determined, the employer shall pay the employee for leave under
 this chapter at an hourly wage that may not be less than the amount
 required by Section 62.051.
 Sec. 83.008.  USE OF PAID LEAVE. An employee may use paid
 leave accrued under this chapter for any purpose and is not required
 to disclose to the employer the reason for taking leave.
 Sec. 83.009.  NOTICE TO EMPLOYER. (a) If an employee's need
 to use paid leave under this chapter is foreseeable, an employer may
 require advance notice of the intention to use paid leave under this
 chapter but may not require the employee to give notice more than
 seven days before the date the leave is to begin.
 (b)  If an employee's need for paid leave is not foreseeable,
 an employer may require the employee to give notice of the
 employee's intention to use paid leave under this chapter as soon as
 practicable.
 Sec. 83.010.  NOTICE TO EMPLOYEES. (a) Each employer
 subject to this chapter shall, at the time of hiring, provide notice
 in both English and Spanish to each employee:
 (1)  of the employee's entitlement to paid leave, the
 amount of paid leave provided to employees, and the terms under
 which paid leave may be used under this chapter;
 (2)  that retaliation by the employer against the
 employee for requesting or using paid leave to which the employee is
 entitled is prohibited; and
 (3)  that the employee has a right to file a complaint
 with the commission or bring a civil action for damages for any
 violation of this chapter.
 (b)  An employer may comply with this section by displaying a
 poster in a conspicuous place, accessible to employees, at the
 employer's place of business that contains in both English and
 Spanish the information required by this section.
 (c)  The notice under this section must also be provided in a
 language other than English or Spanish if that language is the first
 language spoken by at least 30 percent of the employer's workforce.
 (d)  The commission may adopt rules to establish additional
 requirements concerning the means by which employers provide notice
 required under this section.
 Sec. 83.011.  BREAK IN SERVICE. (a) Termination of an
 employee's employment by an employer, regardless of whether
 voluntary or involuntary, is considered a break in service for
 purposes of this chapter.
 (b)  An employee who is subsequently rehired by the employer
 following a break in service:
 (1)  begins to accrue paid leave under this chapter;
 and
 (2)  is not entitled to any unused hours of paid leave
 that had accrued before the employee's break in service, unless the
 employee is rehired within 30 days of separation or the employer
 agrees to reinstate some or all of the employee's previously
 accrued paid leave.
 Sec. 83.012.  TRANSFER OF EMPLOYEE. (a) The transfer of an
 employee to a separate division, entity, or location of the same
 employer is not considered to be a break in service for purposes of
 this chapter.
 (b)  Following a transfer described by Subsection (a), the
 transferred employee is entitled to:
 (1)  retain all accrued paid leave under this chapter;
 and
 (2)  immediately access the retained paid leave time
 without any waiting period, except that the employee remains
 subject to any remaining period of the initial waiting period
 described by Section 83.005(a), if applicable.
 Sec. 83.013.  SUCCESSOR EMPLOYER. If an employer succeeds
 or takes the place of an existing employer, each employee of the
 former employer who is employed by the successor is entitled to:
 (1)  retain all accrued paid leave under this chapter;
 and
 (2)  immediately access the retained paid leave time
 without any waiting period, except that the employee remains
 subject to any remaining period of the initial waiting period
 described by Section 83.005(a), if applicable.
 Sec. 83.014.  LIMITATIONS OF CHAPTER. This chapter does
 not:
 (1)  prevent an employer from providing more paid leave
 than is required under this chapter;
 (2)  prohibit an employer that provides paid leave in
 addition to the paid leave required under this chapter from
 restricting the purposes for which an employee may take that
 additional leave; or
 (3)  diminish any rights provided to any employee under
 a collective bargaining agreement.
 Sec. 83.015.  COLLECTIVE BARGAINING AGREEMENT. A collective
 bargaining agreement may waive the requirements of this chapter by
 clear and unambiguous language within the agreement.
 Sec. 83.016.  RETALIATION PROHIBITED. An employer may not
 take retaliatory personnel action or otherwise discriminate
 against an employee because the employee:
 (1)  requests or uses paid leave in accordance with
 this chapter; or
 (2)  files a complaint with the commission alleging the
 employer's violation of this chapter.
 Sec. 83.017.  COMPLAINT; HEARING; PENALTY. (a) Any
 employee aggrieved by a violation of this chapter may file a claim
 with the commission in the manner prescribed by Subchapter D,
 Chapter 61.
 (b)  On receipt of a complaint, the commission shall
 investigate and dispose of the complaint in the same manner as a
 wage claim under Subchapter D, Chapter 61.
 (c)  An employer who is found by the commission, by a
 preponderance of the evidence, to have violated Section 83.016 is
 liable to the commission for an administrative penalty of $500 for
 each violation.
 (d)  An employer who is found by the commission, by a
 preponderance of the evidence, to have violated a provision under
 this chapter other than Section 83.016 is liable to the commission
 for an administrative penalty of not more than $100 for each
 violation.
 (e)  The commission may award the employee all appropriate
 relief, including payment for used paid leave, rehiring or
 reinstatement to the employee's previous job, payment of back
 wages, and reestablishment of employee benefits for which the
 employee otherwise would have been eligible if the employee had not
 been subject to retaliatory personnel action or other
 discrimination.
 (f)  A party may appeal a final decision of the commission by
 filing suit in district court.
 Sec. 83.018.  CIVIL ACTION BY EMPLOYEE. (a) An employee
 aggrieved by a violation of this chapter may bring a civil action to
 enforce rights protected by this chapter, including an action for
 appropriate injunctive relief, in the district court in the county
 in which the alleged violation occurred or in which the alleged
 violator's residence or principal place of business is located.
 (b)  An action under this section must be brought not later
 than the third anniversary of the date of the violation.
 (c)  The employer of an employee who prevails in a civil
 action under this section is liable to the affected employee for
 damages equal to the amount of any wages, salary, employment
 benefits, or other compensation denied or lost to the employee by
 reason of the violation or, if wages, salary, employment benefits,
 or other compensation has not been denied or lost, any actual
 monetary losses sustained by the employee as a direct result of the
 violation.
 (d)  An employer described by Subsection (c) is also liable
 for equitable relief as appropriate, including reinstatement and
 promotion.
 (e)  In addition to any judgment awarded to an employee, the
 court may require the employer to pay reasonable attorney's fees,
 reasonable expert witness fees, and other costs.
 SECTION 2.  (a) The change in law made by this Act applies to
 an employee hired on or after January 1, 2023. For an employee
 hired before January 1, 2023, paid leave under Chapter 83, Labor
 Code, as added by this Act, begins to accrue on that date, and the
 employee may begin to use the paid leave 90 calendar days after that
 date, unless the employer agrees to an earlier date.
 (b)  Chapter 83, Labor Code, as added by this Act, does not
 preempt or override the terms of any collective bargaining
 agreement effective before January 1, 2023.
 SECTION 3.  This Act takes effect January 1, 2023.