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  • South Carolina Daily Gazette

    Advocates say SC law protecting pregnant employees is working

    By Skylar Laird,

    2024-07-08
    https://img.particlenews.com/image.php?url=43sZyZ_0uJN9Eyv00

    Since 2018, South Carolina law has required businesses with at least 15 workers to provide accommodations to pregnant employees. (File/July Alcantara/Getty Images)

    COLUMBIA — When Emily Walsh got pregnant last year, she was afraid she would have to quit her job.

    She typically spends her days driving from house to house, teaching life skills to people with disabilities. But the severe dizziness and fatigue that came with her pregnancy made driving difficult some days. She worried about what would happen if her persistent nausea made her sick in someone else’s home.

    “I love my job, and I didn’t want to stop doing what I was doing,” the 27-year-old said about her job with the nonprofit Able SC .

    As Walsh, who lives in the Columbia area, fretted about her symptoms, a friend sent her a video she’d seen on social media. Did you know, the video said, if you’re pregnant you’re legally entitled to ask your employer for accommodations?

    A South Carolina law called the Pregnancy Accommodations Act, which requires workplaces to accommodate pregnant workers, went into effect six years ago. Then, last June, a similar law took effect at the federal level.

    Walsh hadn’t known. After talking to her human resources manager, she got permission to work from home on days when she didn’t feel well enough to leave the house, making virtual home visits using video calls.

    Had Walsh’s employer not voluntarily met her needs, she could have forced the issue, filing a complaint with the agency that handles housing and workforce discrimination cases in the state.

    Having that legal backing made the conversation with human resources easier, Walsh said.

    “That gave me a lot more confidence,” Walsh said.

    Complaints

    About 70,000 women in South Carolina get pregnant each year.

    In the six years the state law has protected pregnant workers, the state Human Affairs Commission has received 84 complaints about employers not following the rules, according to commission attorney Jamie Smith.

    In many of those cases, the commission found no evidence of discrimination, according to data provided to the SC Daily Gazette.

    Because Walsh’s company was willing to work with her — starting in her first trimester — she never had to file a complaint.

    Her human resources manager encouraged her to use sick days and offered to help her apply for short-term disability leave if she needed it. But Walsh didn’t want to use those options, she said.

    “I’m very grateful to have paid sick leave, but I also didn’t want to necessarily do that,” Walsh said. “I wanted to work.”

    That was the point of the law, said Rep. Beth Bernstein, the primary sponsor of the bill that passed both chambers unanimously six years ago.

    Along with protecting pregnant women from losing their jobs, Bernstein didn’t want women to postpone having children or for expecting mothers to quit their jobs because their workplaces wouldn’t give them the grace they needed, she said.

    Results of complaints

    Closed for administrative reasons: 6

    No cause found: 34

    Cause found and agreement negotiations entered: 5

    Withdrew after an agreement was reached: 6

    Under investigation: 23

    Source: S.C. Human Affairs Commission

    “Expanding your family, you shouldn’t be discouraged because you think it’s somehow going to affect your workplace performance,” said the Columbia Democrat and mother of two.

    Some of the accommodations pregnant women can request under the law include longer or more frequent breaks, a chair to sit in if they spend much of the day standing, modified schedules or limits on how much they can lift.

    Supporters of the law had expected to see more complaints.

    Kelli Parker, spokesperson for the Women’s Rights and Empowerment Network, which advocated for the law, believes the low numbers indicate the law has been a deterrent. Employers are giving their pregnant workers the accommodations they need before getting to the point of a legal complaint, she said.

    “The fact that there have been fewer claims than we expected, I think, is a testament to the need for this, No. 1, and the success of the implementation,” Parker said.

    Of the complaints in South Carolina, 23 remain under investigation, according to Human Affairs Commission data. Another five have yet to be formalized, Smith said.

    But in 55% of the cases with a completed investigation, the Human Affairs Commission couldn’t find enough evidence to prove the employer discriminated against the employee. That doesn’t mean the discrimination didn’t happen but that the commission couldn’t find proof, Smith said. Most of the investigated complaints were found to have no cause.

    An additional 26% of the complaints were resolved privately between employee and employer, causing the employees to withdraw their complaint.

    Six complaints ended for administrative reasons, such as being filed for a business with fewer than 15 employees or the complainant not cooperating. The Human Affairs Commission stepped in five times to help negotiate an agreement between the employee and employer.

    Parker said opponents of this kind of legislation often assume companies will be required to make major concessions. For the most part, the accommodations the law requires are small but still vital to pregnant women.

    “We’re just trying to make sure people are comfortable,” Parker said.

    Federal law

    The federal law that went into effect last June offers protections similar to those implemented at the state level. Both apply to businesses with 15 or more employees and require them to give pregnant workers “reasonable accommodations” unless it causes the employer “undue hardship.”

    Where the two differ is on the issue of abortion.

    The U.S. Equal Employment Opportunity Commission’s final rules on what employers can and can’t do under the federal law said employers must give accommodations for people seeking abortions as well. That might include time off work for an appointment or recovery.

    Red states sue over abortion provisions in new federal rules for pregnant workers

    South Carolina Attorney General Alan Wilson joined 18 other Republican attorneys general in suing the Biden administration over its interpretation of an otherwise bipartisan law, arguing that it forces states where abortion is illegal to offer those accommodations.

    South Carolina bans abortions once after the sixth week of pregnancy — officially, when an ultrasound detects cardiac activity.

    Women seeking an abortion after that point must travel to another state that allows the procedure to take place later in pregnancy. That travel may require time off. The state’s top lawyer is among those arguing South Carolina companies should not be required to make allowances in those cases.

    Getting out the word

    Once Walsh started working from home part of the time, other coworkers who had gotten pregnant around the same time came to her and asked what they needed to do to get their own accommodations.

    Her coworkers also hadn’t realized asking for accommodations was an option. Walsh pointed them to the resources she used, including a sample legal letter and guidance from attorneys with national nonprofit A Better Balance.

    Walsh said she’d like to see the state law promoted more heavily.

    She suggested businesses be required to hang signs informing employees of their right to ask for accommodations, the same way companies must post information related health and safety worker protections.

    The Human Affairs Commission offers guides to the laws on its website. Nonprofits such as WREN and A Better Balance promote it as well. People who come to WREN with questions often know a law exists but not what kinds of accommodations it specifies or how to ask for them, Parker said.

    “We could do a better job, for sure,” Parker said.

    What’s next

    Walsh’s daughter is now six months old. While state law offers protections for pregnant workers, it offers less for new mothers, she said.

    A 2020 state law called the Lactation Support Act, also approved unanimously, requires businesses to give breastfeeding mothers extra breaks and a private location other than a toilet stall to pump breast milk. It applies to employers of all sizes, including those with fewer than 15 employees.

    And separate laws passed in 2022 and 2023 provide parents who work for state agencies, public colleges and school districts up to six weeks of paid parental leave once a child is born or adopted.

    Last year’s law made South Carolina the first state in the Southeast to offer teachers that much time off without requiring them to burn vacation or sick days or simply go without a paycheck.

    But Walsh said she would like to see mothers’ options expanded.

    When looking for a job, Walsh knew she would want to have children one day and specifically looked at maternity leave options.

    She considers herself lucky to have found a job with 12 weeks of paid maternity leave but knows many people don’t have the same benefit.

    Bernstein said paid parental leave is something she has been focused on as well.

    She was the House’s lead sponsor of the 2022 law that guaranteed up to six weeks of paid leave. Prior to that, state employees had to use up their accrued vacation and sick days before taking unpaid leave.

    The bill she filed, which the House approved overwhelmingly, provided up to 12 weeks. But to get the bill through the Senate, advocates had to chop the paid time off in half.

    Bernstein refiled the proposal last year to increase maternity leave for state employees to 12 weeks, as well as boost paternity leave from two weeks to four. But the legislation never even received a hearing.

    “I think we’ve got to continue to focus our energy on encouraging women in the workplace to have a family,” Bernstein said.

    Know your rights in SC

    The state Pregnancy Accommodations Act has applied to businesses in South Carolina with 15 or more employees since 2018. It requires the following reasonable accommodations for workers “with medical needs arising from pregnancy , childbirth, or related medical conditions”:

    • Providing more frequent or longer break periods
    • Providing more frequent bathroom breaks
    • Providing a private place, other than a bathroom stall for the purpose of expressing milk
    • Modifying food or drink policy
    • Providing seating or allowing the employee to sit more frequently if the job requires the employee to stand
    • Providing assistance with manual labor and limits on lifting
    • Temporarily transferring the employee to a less strenuous or hazardous vacant position, if qualified
    • Providing job restructuring or light duty, if available
    • Acquiring or modifying equipment or devices necessary for performing essential job functions
    • Modifying work schedules

    Additionally, the Lactation Support Act unanimously approved by the Legislature and signed into law in June 2020 applies to all employers in South Carolina, regardless of size. It says all workers must have the opportunity to express milk in a private place other than a toilet stall.

    Workers who think their employer is violating either of these laws should file a complaint with the state Human Affairs Commission.

    As for paid time off, separate laws passed in 2022 and 2023 provide parents who work for state agencies, public colleges and school districts up to six weeks of paid family leave once a child is born or adopted. Parents who foster a child in state custody can take two weeks paid leave.

    The post Advocates say SC law protecting pregnant employees is working appeared first on SC Daily Gazette .

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    Comments / 2
    Add a Comment
    Toby Motte
    07-09
    Hey, she did what she was supposed to do. She went to her human resources and they did what they were supposed to do no problem so why did you even write this article trying to scare people with your power of the pen?
    connie porter
    07-08
    Who provides child care for these children while the mothers work? Nobody, and that prevents them from working. Every stupid law has a negative impact on the nation.
    View all comments
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