Int 0565-2007
Prohibiting employment discrimination based on an individual’s actual or perceived status as a caregiver.
IntroductionFiledCommittee on General Welfareintroduced 2007-04-23
Filed — closed without being enacted.
Official record · Legistar
Agenda: 2007-04-23Passed: 2009-12-31
Committee on General Welfare — Human Resources Administration/Department of Social Services, Department of Homeless Services, and charitable institutions.
How it compares
36% of similar bills passed
18 passed · 32 died
This bill: 983 days in committee
Similar bills: median 573 days · 147 days when passed
Compared against 50 Introduction bills in Committee on General Welfare.
Ranked by how closely each matches this bill's topic — closest first:
Int 0024-2002
Gender-Based Discrimination
82dEnacted
Int 0754-2000
Gender-Based Discrimination
573dFiled
Int 0400-1998
Domestic Violence Victims, Discrimination
857dEnacted
Int 0107-2002
Employment discrimination against victims of domestic violence.
626dEnacted
Int 0097-2002
Provide employment discrimination protection, WEP & Workfare
645dFiled
Int 0504-2004
Human Rights Law
402dFiled
+ 44 more comparable bills
Sponsors (36)
Betsy Gotbaum(prime)
Lifecycle
IntroducedIntroduced by Council
2007-04-23 · City Council
ActionReferred to Comm by Council
2007-04-23 · City Council
HeardHearing Held by Committee
2007-12-06 · Committee on General Welfare
ActionAmendment Proposed by Comm
2007-12-06 · Committee on General Welfare
HeldLaid Over by Committee
2007-12-06 · Committee on General Welfare
ClosedFiled (End of Session)
2009-12-31 · City Council
Heard at (2)
Committee on General Welfare · 2007-12-06 · 1:00 PM · 250 Broadway - Hearing Room, 16th Fl.
City Council · 2007-04-23 · 1:30 PM · Council Chambers - City Hall
Attachments (4)
Full text
Be it enacted by the Council as follows:
Section 1. Legislative findings and intent. The City Council finds and declares that a growing population in New York City is victim to workplace discrimination based on its caregiving responsibilities for children and dependent relatives. The Center for Worklife Law reports a growing trend of federal lawsuits filed by workers alleging family responsibilities discrimination (FRD). Family responsibilities discrimination has been defined as a form of sex discrimination based on gender stereotypes, where employees are treated unfairly at work because of their informal caregiving responsibilities for children, elderly parents or ill relatives. According to the Center for Worklife Law, New York is one of three states with the greatest number of FRD lawsuits.
The National Alliance for Caregiving (NAC) estimates that, as of 2003, there were 44.4 million American informal caregivers (21% of the adult population) present in approximately 22.9 million U.S. households (21% of U.S. households). According to The Family Caregiver Alliance, as of 2004, there are 1.9 million people in New York State providing informal care to loved ones.
NAC reports that nearly six in ten caregivers (59%) have worked while actively providing care and had to make work-related adjustments in order to help the person for whom they provide care. More than half (57%) of working caregivers report that as a result of their caregiving responsibilities, they have had to go to work late, leave early, or take time off during the day to provide care.
The District of Columbia’s Human Rights Act was amended to protect individuals with “family responsibilities” against discrimination in the workplace, and is the only law in the United States that expressly protects against discrimination in employment based on one’s status as a caregiver.
The City Council finds that the New York City Human Rights Law is one of the most comprehensive civil rights laws in the nation, providing numerous protections against workplace discrimination. Nonetheless, the City Council finds that the Human Rights Law fails to protect individuals against employment discrimination based on one’s status as a caregiver, and must be amended to extend employment discrimination protection to New Yorkers who are actual or perceived caretakers.
§ 2. Section 8-101 of chapter one of title eight of the administrative code of the city of New York is amended to read as follows:
§ 8-101 Policy.
In the city of New York, with its great cosmopolitan population, there is no greater danger to the health, morals, safety and welfare of the city and its inhabitants than the existence of groups prejudiced against one another and antagonistic to each other because of their actual or perceived differences, including those based on race, color, creed, age, national origin, alienage or citizenship status, gender, sexual orientation, disability, marital status, partnership status, caregiver status, status as a victim of domestic violence or status as a victim of sex offenses or stalking, whether children are, may be or would be residing with a person or conviction or arrest record. The council hereby finds and declares that prejudice, intolerance, bigotry, and discrimination, bias-related violence or harassment and disorder occasioned thereby threaten the rights and proper privileges of its inhabitants and menace the institutions and foundation of a free democratic state. A city agency is hereby created with power to eliminate and prevent discrimination from playing any role in actions relating to employment, public accommodations, and housing and other real estate, and to take other actions against prejudice, intolerance, bigotry, discrimination and bias-related violence or harassment as herein provided; and the commission established hereunder is hereby given general jurisdiction and power for such purposes.
§ 3. Section 8-102 of chapter one of title eight of the administrative code of the city of New York is amended by adding a new subdivision 25 to read as follows:
25. (a) The term “caregiver” means a person who is a contributor to the ongoing care of a child for whom the person has assumed parental responsibility or of a person or persons in a dependent relationship with the caregiver and who suffer from a disability, irrespective of their number. Subdivision 16(c) of section 8-102 of this chapter shall not apply for the purposes of this subdivision.
(b) The term “dependent relationship” means the relationship of a caregiver to a person who is related by blood, legal custody, marriage, or to his or her domestic partner, as defined in section 3-240 of the administrative code of the city of New York, or to a person with whom the caregiver lives in a familial relationship.
§ 4. Subparagraphs (a), (b), (c), and (d) of subdivision 1 of section 8-107 of chapter one of title eight of the administrative code of the city of New York are amended to read as follows:
1. Employment. It shall be an unlawful discriminatory practice:
(a) For an employer or an employee or agent thereof, because of the actual or perceived age, race, creed, color, national origin, gender, disability, marital status, partnership status, caregiver status, sexual orientation or alienage or citizenship status of any person, to refuse to hire or employ or to bar or to discharge from employment such person or to discriminate against such person in compensation or in terms, conditions or privileges of employment.
(b) For an employment agency or an employee or agent thereof to discriminate against any person because of such person’s actual or perceived age, race, creed, color, national origin, gender, disability, marital status, partnership status, caregiver status, sexual orientation or alienage or citizenship status in receiving, classifying, disposing or otherwise acting upon applications for its services or in referring an applicant or applicants for its services to an employer or employers.
(c) For a labor organization or an employee or agent thereof, because of the actual or perceived age, race, creed, color, national origin, gender, disability, marital status, partnership status, caregiver status, sexual orientation or alienage or citizenship status of any person, to exclude or to expel from its membership such person or to discriminate in any way against any of its members or against any employer or any person employed by an employer.
(d) For any employer, labor organization or employment agency or an employee or agent thereof to declare, print or circulate or cause to be declared, printed or circulated any statement, advertisement or publication, or to use any form of application for employment or to make any inquiry in connection with prospective employment, which expresses, directly or indirectly, any limitation, specification, or discrimination as to age, race, creed, color, national origin, gender, disability, marital status, partnership status, caregiver status, sexual orientation or alienage or citizenship status, or any intent to make any such limitation, specification or discrimination.
§ 5. Section 8-107 of chapter one of title eight of the administrative code of the city of New York is amended by adding a new subdivision 16-a to read as follows:
16-a. Applicability; caregivers.
(a) Requirement to make reasonable accommodation to the needs of caregivers. Any person prohibited by the provisions of this section from discriminating on the basis of caregiver status shall make reasonable accommodation as defined in subdivision eighteen of section 8-102 of this chapter to enable a caregiver to satisfy the essential requisites of a job or enjoy the right or rights in question provided that the caregiver status is known or should have been known by the employer.
§ 6. This local law shall take effect upon enactment.
LS #1710
M.R.M.
11.21.07