Moore, Gomes Oppose Unpredictable Work Schedules

From State Seantors Marilyn Moore and Ed Gomes:

Senator Marilyn Moore (D-Bridgeport) and Senator Ed Gomes (D-Bridgeport) today joined legislators, activists, and working people to advocate in support of Senate Bill 321, ahead of the Children’s Committee hearings for the bill. The coalition is calling for the passage of a Fair Workweek bill, limiting an abusive practice known as “on-call scheduling” across Connecticut’s large corporate retail, food service, hospitality, and certain nursing home work industries.

Throughout Connecticut, hundreds of thousands of low wage hourly workers, many earning poverty wages, struggle to earn a stable income because of unpredictable work schedules. Employees are often forced to work with little notice, maintain open availability for “on-call” shifts without any guarantee of work, and have shifts cancelled at the last minute.

“After my first legislative session, I took a seasonal job at one of my district’s big-box retailers because I wanted to experience what many of my constituents who work low wage jobs have to go through in their daily lives. The experience was eye opening and life changing,” said Sen. Moore. “The hours were too few, the wage was far below what a person needs to survive, and the work was both mentally and physically draining. On top of that, I was on-call so I was on the hook until the last minute to find out whether or not I would be working each day. I couldn’t commit myself to a second job without putting my first one at risk. Workers in Connecticut deserve predictable schedules so they can balance their daily routines and succeed for themselves and their families.”

“Families in Connecticut suffer when big companies are allowed to abuse their workers’time with unfair, forever changing, and inflexible work schedules,” Sen. Gomes, Labor Committee co-chair said. We need to protect workers and their families by eliminating on-call scheduling and shifts scheduled too closely, which often times impede employees from achieving financial security.”

When parents’ and caregivers’ incomes are unstable, families struggle to meet basic expenses and arrange child care, doctor’s appointments, and family meals. Families suffer when working people have highly variable hours and no voice in their work schedules. As a result, they struggle to spend enough time with their children and spouses.

SB 321 would limit on-call shift scheduling. By passing a Fair Workweek bill, Connecticut can lift up its low wage workers and families with opportunities to budget their lives, plan childcare, pursue higher education, work toward economic advancement, stay healthy, and enjoy family time. It’s the fair and smart thing to do.

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  1. I understand and sympathize with the difficulties this bill addresses. Unfortunately that is now the world we live in thanks to President Clinton, Democrats and Republicans who gave us NAFTA.

    That genie is already out of the bottle.

    It would be far more productive to work on making Connecticut a more business-friendly state. This is just another example of very liberal CT legislators that have done nothing but drive business away.

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