[Salon] Thousands Sign Open Letter Demanding Biden Order Paid Sick Leave for Railway Workers



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Thousands Sign Open Letter Demanding Biden Order Paid Sick Leave for Railway Workers

"No one, especially in the world's richest nation, should have to choose between forgoing pay or working through severe illness and family emergencies," says The Lever's letter.

December 5, 2022

U.S. President Joe Biden faces mounting pressure to take executive action to ensure that freight rail workers have paid sick leave, including from an open letterspearheaded by The Lever that's already been signed by thousands of people, according to the online news outlet.

Calls for Biden to issue such an order have been stacking up since the U.S. Senate passed a resolution forcing rail workers on the verge of striking to accept a White House-brokered agreement without paid sick days. On Friday, the president signedthe measure for which he'd advocated, provoking widespread working-class outrage.

"You have previously stated, unequivocally, that all workers deserve paid sick leave. And yet you have just signed a bill from Congress to force unionized rail workers to go back to work without appropriate paid sick leave," begins the letter to Biden, which began circulating Friday.

The letter addressed to Biden continues:

Right now, you have the executive authority to extend paid sick leave to rail workers, and you do not need congressional approval to do that. We implore you to use that power right now.

No one, especially in the world's richest nation, should have to choose between forgoing pay or working through severe illness and family emergencies. Rail workers keep our infrastructure moving—their work is hard and critical to the success of our nation.

It is your moral obligation to immediately take executive action that fulfills your presidential campaign pledge to support paid sick days.

In a tweet Monday afternoon, The Lever said that nearly 8,000 had already signed on to it.

David Sirota, The Lever's founder and editor in chief, said Sunday that "Biden wants you to believe it's all Republicans' fault. But he has the power to do this right now."

Other critics of how Biden and Democratic congressional leaders responded to the rail dispute have also spent the past few days pushing for further action.

"If you are outraged about Congress' handling of the railway strike, join me in demanding that President Biden sign an executive order guaranteeing at least seven days of paid sick leave for railroad workers," said former Labor Secretary Robert Reich. "If these workers are vital to the economy, why not treat them as such?"

A Monday editorial from The Boston Globe also argued that "the status quo is simply untenable" and Biden should consider issuing an executive order—a call that came after the newspaper reported on about 200 protesters who picketed the president's visit to the John F. Kennedy Library and Museum in the Massachusetts city Friday afternoon, carrying signs that said "striking is a human right" and "please support sick days for workers."

As the editorial explains:

Congress could have added the sick days unions wanted to the deal, but a proposal to do so was blocked by Republican senators. But that shouldn't be the last word. As Biden himself said, "I've made it very clear: I'm going to fight for paid leave, not only for rail workers but for all Americans." So far, he hasn't explained exactly how he would do that. But one way he ought to explore is an executive order.

There is precedent. On Labor Day in 2015, former president Barack Obama signed an executive order that required all federal contractors to provide their employees with up to seven days of paid sick leave. But that order exempted rail companies. Biden could simply extend that policy to apply more broadly so that it includes rail workers as well, many of whom work for companies that are federal contractors because they ship things like U.S. mail or equipment for the Department of Defense. Doing so would not only benefit thousands of workers, but it would set a standard for the rest of the industry.

"It's unconscionable that after the last few years—in which the Covid pandemic forced the entire world to learn about the importance of sensible public health policies—American lawmakers and corporate leaders are still reluctant to grant workers any paid sick leave," the editorial concludes. "And while Biden can certainly celebrate the fact that his leadership helped avert a potentially catastrophic rail strike, he should stick to his word and push for paid sick leave to become a part of all workplaces."



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