State Rep Giraldo continues fight for expanded paid family leave in RI
At the time, Giraldo was utilizing the full amount of his
"I thought of them having to face leaving their child at the NICU and figuring out how to live," Giraldo said.
As a result, Giraldo has made it his top priority to fight for expanded paid family leave benefits and won't stop until the revised bill he is sponsoring is passed in the House.
According to Giraldo,
"We were the first state in
"Other states provide 100% of the salary and in
Giraldo said employees are eligible to use their TCI benefits when a qualified health care provider can confirm and sign off that an individual needs care for a medical condition or post surgery.
Benefits also apply to moms, dads, and families when there is a birth or adoption.
"My bill expands benefits from six to 12 weeks, as well as who can provide care, and the dependent's allowance from
While the bill did pass in the
Each year, leadership also gets lots of other great bills and ideas, Giraldo explained, so the capacity to consider every bill is limited.
"My role is to demonstrate how important it is to have this in RI by rallying with the community," Giraldo stated.
In the face of opposition, Giraldo says he mainly points to the other states that have successfully implemented the policy at a higher rate.
He recently testified with several advocacy groups in favor of the changes at a
Giraldo has also reached out to coalitions that are in support of the bill as well as business coalitions that are opposed to it, advocating that the changes will help with employee retention overall.
Groups that have offered their support to Giraldo include RI Kids Count,
The next step is to push the bill to leadership so it can get a Labor Committee vote, Giraldo said.
"Once the Labor committee votes and it passes, it goes to the House floor. I have full faith that if it passes by Labor, then it will pass on the House floor."
But if the House again refuses to pass the bill, Giraldo has no plans of backing down.
"I would push it forward again and try to understand what the barriers are to it moving forward," he said.
"I would keep chipping away at it, keep bringing in community partners; I won't allow for this to go to the wayside."
If the House approves the revised bill, it would then go to the Governor to sign or veto it, but Giraldo doesn't think a veto would happen.
The effective date would be
"There's not a single individual I've talked to that would not wholeheartedly embrace this legislation because everyone at some point will need it," Giraldo stated.
Giraldo will be submitting a total of 15 bills this year, including one on paycheck transparency for employers, another prohibiting landlords to inquire on the immigration status of a tenant, a bill supporting the retention and recruitment of teachers, and one allowing
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