Categories: Hospitality

By Brian W. Steinbach

Since 2008, the District of Columbia’s Accrued Sick and Safe Leave Act (“ASSLA”) has required D.C. employers to provide employees with paid leave (i) to care for themselves or their family members, and (ii) for work absences associated with domestic violence or abuse. Specifically, ASSLA provides covered workers with the ability to earn and take from up to three to up to seven days of covered paid leave each year, depending on the size of the employer.

On January 2, 2014, Mayor Vincent C. Gray signed the Earned Sick and Safe Leave Amendment Act of 2013 (“Amendment”), which significantly amends ASSLA. Among other things, the Amendment eliminates the prior exclusion of tipped restaurant wait staff and bartenders and adds a new provision requiring that restaurant and bar employees, for whom the tip credit is claimed, be provided with at least one hour of covered paid leave for every 43 hours worked, up to a maximum of five days per calendar year, regardless of the size of the employer. (This is the same level as is currently required for employers with 25-99 employees.) However, these employees need only be paid the regular District minimum wage while on leave, without taking into consideration the amount of tips that they may have received if working.

For a more detailed description of the Amendment, please review our recent client alert

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