Governor Andrew M. Cuomo signed the Farm Workers Bill, which establishes the Farm Laborers Fair Labor Practices Act to protect farm worker rights and ensure equitable housing and working conditions.
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The bill grants farm workers overtime pay, a day of rest each week, disability and Paid Family Leave coverage, unemployment benefits and other labor protections.
The bill will take effect on January 1, 2020.
"This new law is not just a great achievement in terms of the effect on the human condition, it's also a milestone in the crusade for social justice," Governor Cuomo said.
"By signing this bill into law, 100,000 farmers and their families will have better lives and will finally have the same protections that other workers have enjoyed for over 80 years.
"This powerful and practical achievement is even more significant in the era of President Trump who continually diminishes workers' rights, attacks labor unions, disrespects the disenfranchised and has made divide and conquer, rather than unify and grow, the credo of America."
The Farm Laborers Fair Labor Practices Act, which recognizes agriculture is a unique industry, includes:
Grants collective bargaining rights to farm laborers;
Requires employers of farm laborers to allow at least 24 consecutive hours of rest each week;
Provides for 60-hour work week for farm workers;
Requires overtime rate at one and one-half times normal rate;
Makes provisions of unemployment insurance law applicable to farm laborers and reduces costs to farmers for ineligible workers (H-2A);
Ensures sanitary codes apply to all farm worker housing, regardless of the number of occupants;
Removes a payroll threshold for requiring farm labor employers to obtain workers' compensation coverage;
Allows farm laborers to receive disability and Paid Family Leave benefits; and
Requires reporting of injuries to employers of farm laborers. ■
A trailing cold front in connection with a low pressure system currently moving east across the Great Lakes toward New England will bring a chance of rain into the eastern U.S. on this first day of November following an exceptionally dry October for this part of the country.