Work sick or stay home? Omicron, staff shortage put U.S. employees in a conundrum

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Ingrid Vilorio, who works at a Jack in the Box restaurant in Castro Valley, California, started feeling sick last March and soon tested positive for COVID. Vilorio alerted a supervisor, who didn’t tell her she was eligible for paid sick leave _ as well as supplemental COVID leave _ under California law.

Vilorio said her doctor told her to take 15 days off, but she decided to take just 10 because she had bills to pay. Months later, a co-worker told Vilorio she was owed sick pay for the time she was off. Working through Fight for $15, a group that works to unionize fast food workers, Vilorio and her colleagues reported the restaurant to the county health department. Shortly after that, she was given back pay.

But Vilorio, who speaks Spanish, said through a translator that problems persist. Workers are still getting sick, she said, and are often afraid to speak up.

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“Without our health, we can’t work,” she said. “We’re told that we’re front line workers, but we’re not treated like it.”

D’Innocenzio reported from New York and Durbin reported from Detroit.

© 2022 The Canadian Press