HomeMy WebLinkAboutOrd. 1618-2021 (21-150)City of South San Francisco P.O. Box 711 (City Hall,
400 Grand Avenue)
South San Francisco, CA
City Council
Ordinance: ORD 1618-2021
File Number: 21-150 Enactment Number: ORD 1618-2021
URGENCY ORDINANCE AMENDING TITLE 8 OF
THE SOUTH SAN FRANCISCO MUNICIPAL CODE
TO ADD CHAPTER 8.77 "COVID-19 HAZARD PAY"
TO REQUIRE GROCERY AND DRUG STORES IN
THE CITY TO PAY EMPLOYEES AN ADDITIONAL
FIVE DOLLARS ($5.00) PER HOUR IN HAZARD PAY
DURING THE CORONAVIRUS (COVID-19)
PANDEMIC.
WHEREAS, on March 19, 2020, the California State Public Health Officer, designated specific
sectors and their workers, including grocery and drug stores, as Essential Critical Infrastructure Workers
("essential workers") to ensure the "continuity of functions critical to public health and safety, as well as
economic and national security"; and
WHEREAS, since the beginning of the COVID-19 pandemic, grocery and drug store workers
in the City of South San Francisco have continued to report to work and serve their communities, despite
the ongoing hazards and danger of being exposed to and infected by the novel coronavirus, helping to
ensure individuals throughout the City of South San Francisco have had access to the food and medicine
they need during this pandemic; and
WHEREAS, essential grocery and drug store workers are not highly paid and cannot choose to
work from home -they must come to work to do their jobs, which involve heightened risk of exposure
and infection of COVID-19 through substantial interaction with customers on an ongoing basis and
indoors where there is less air circulation; and
WHEREAS, according to an October 29, 2020 study published in the journal Occupational
and Environmental Medicine, a comprehensive test of workers at one grocery store resulted in 20
percent of grocery workers testing positive for COVID-19, even though three of four workers were
asymptomatic; and
WHEREAS, according to an August 2020 article in The Washington Post, at least 130 U.S.
grocery workers had died from COVID-19, and more than 8,200 have tested positive for the virus; and
WHEREAS, according to a January 2021 article in The Washington Post, the United Food and
Commercial Workers estimates 109 of its members have died to from COVID-19 and more than 20,000
have tested positive; and
WHEREAS, despite the efforts of grocery and drug stores to take precautions and keep
customers and employees safe, including requiring masks, social distancing, and sanitizing cash
registers, food conveyor
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File Number: 21-150
Enactment Number: ORD 1618-2021
belts, and shopping carts, there have been highly publicized outbreaks of COVID-19 among grocery
store employees in the San Francisco Bay Area, and the health threats that these grocery and drug store
workers face cannot be overstated; and
WHEREAS, Latinos comprise about 40 percent of California's population but 55 percent of
positive cases, according to state data as of February 4, 2021, and according to health experts, one of the
main reasons Latinos are especially vulnerable to COVID-19 is because many work in jobs deemed
"essential," that require them to leave home and interact with the public, many in the retail food industry,
which includes grocery stores; and
WHEREAS, on August 28, 2020, the State released the "Blueprint for a Safer Economy" that
assigns counties into color -coded tiers based on a county's case rate and test positivity rate, and that
permits operations of certain businesses and activities based on a county's tier;
WHEREAS, Governor Gavin Newsom issued an emergency regional stay at home order on
December 3, 2020, as a result of the critically low availability Intensive Care Unit ("ICU") beds; and
WHEREAS, on January 17, 2021, the California Department of Public Health reported another
COVID-19 variant that had grown more common across the state since December, with worrisome signs
that this variant may be highly transmissible; and
WHEREAS, despite the rescinding of the statewide December 3, 2020 emergency order, the
State is believed to be in the height of the pandemic with a stay at home order in many regions of the
state, including the Bay Area region, where ICU capacity is 24 percent, and region are a long way from
minimal risk where there would be one (1) daily new case per 100,000 or less than two (2) percent
positivity; and
WHEREAS, based on the case rate and positivity rate, San Mateo county has been listed in the
"purple" and most elevated risk tier under the State blueprint, representing "widespread" risk throughout
the county, since November and continues to be listed in this tier; and
WHEREAS, grocery and drug stores are the primary points of distribution for food, medicine,
and other daily necessities for the residents of the City of South San Francisco and are therefore essential
to the vitality of our community;
WHEREAS, given this essential role, grocery and drug stores have largely remained open
throughout the COVID-19 pandemic, with many workers continuing to perform their job duties in
person; and
WHEREAS, the City of South San Francisco recognizes that grocery and drug store workers
must be justly compensated for the clear and present dangers of doing their jobs during the pandemic,
and increases in wages result in more money being spent to stimulate our local economy; and
WHEREAS, grocery and drug store workers -should they and members of their family become
infected -risk being unable to work and earn an income, and an inability to pay for housing, childcare and
healthcare costs; and
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File Number: 21-150 Enactment Number. ORD 1618-2021
WHEREAS, the United States' largest grocery and drug store retail companies have earned
record profits during the pandemic, and this increase in profit has not transferred to workers, according
to a Brookings Institution analysis published in November 2020; and
WHEREAS, the City of South San Francisco has adopted ordinances to address
COVID-19-related impacts, including eviction protections for tenants; and
WHEREAS, the City of South San Francisco has in the past adopted ordinance affecting the
wages and conditions of employment locally; and
WHEREAS, premium pay, paid in addition to regular wages, is an established type of
compensation for employees performing hazardous duty or work involving physical hardship that can
cause extreme physical discomfort and distress; and
WHEREAS, there are several grocery and drug store chains operating in South San Francisco
that employ workers in South San Francisco, and have at least 500 employees nationwide, with workers
who are facing the hazards of COVID-19 in the workplace every day; and
WHEREAS, in December 2020 and January 2021, a growing list of cities across California,
including Oakland, Los Angeles, Long Beach, San Jose, Berkeley, West Hollywood, Santa Monica,
Montebello, and San Leandro began announcing legislation for hazard pay for essential grocery and drug
store workers during the pandemic, including during the period where counties are in the Purple, Red, or
Orange level of Community Transmission for COVID-19 under State Health orders; and
WHEREAS, the City Council desires to amend Title 8 of the City of South San Francisco
Municipal Code to adopt Chapter 8.77 "COVID-19 Hazard Pay" to require grocery and drug stores in
the City to pay employees an additional five dollars ($5.00) per hour in hazard pay during the
coronavirus (COVID-19) pandemic; and
WHEREAS, California Government Code Section 36937 authorizes the City Council to
introduce and adopt an ordinance it declares to be necessary as an emergency measure to preserve the
public peace, health, and safety at one and the same meeting if passed by at least four-fifths affirmative
votes; and
WHEREAS, this Ordinance is a temporary pay ordinance intended to compensate certain
essential workers at high risk of COVID-19 infection within the workplace during the COVID-19
pandemic outbreak, and thus to serve the public peace, health, safety, and public welfare; and
WHEREAS, the City Council expressly intends this hazard pay requirement to apply
retroactively to February 11, 2021, including all work performed on that date, in order to serve the public
health, safety, and welfare in recognition that the risks posed to grocery and drug store workers
continued during the time period when the City Council actively considered taking action to adopt an
urgency ordinance establishing this hazard pay; and
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File Number: 21-150
Enactment Number., ORD 1618-2021
NOW, THEREFORE, THE CITY COUNCIL OF THE CITY OF SOUTH SAN FRANCISCO
DOES HEREBY ORDAIN AS FOLLOWS.
SECTION 1. Findings
The City Council finds that the foregoing recitals are true and correct and are incorporated into the
Ordinance by this reference.
SECTION 2. Urgent Need
The City Council of the City of South San Francisco hereby finds that there is a current and immediate
threat to the public health, safety and/or welfare and a need for immediate preservation of the public
peace, health, or safety that warrants this urgency measure, which finding is based upon the facts stated
in the Recitals above, and in the staff report presented to the City Council on February 10, 2021, and
February 24, 2021, as well any oral and written testimony at the February 10, 2021 and February 24,
2021, City Council meetings.
This Ordinance and the hazard pay requirement that is established thereunder is declared by the City
Council to be an urgency measure necessary for the immediate preservation of the public peace, health
or safety. The facts constituting such urgency are all of those certain facts set forth and referenced in this
Ordinance and the entirety of the record before the City Council.
SECTION 3. Amendments to the Municipal Code
Chapter 8.77 ("COVID-19 Hazard Pay") is hereby added to Title 8 of the South San Francisco
Municipal Code to read as follows:
8.77.010. Title.
This chapter shall be known as the "Grocery and Drug Store Worker Hazard Pay Emergency
Ordinance."
8.77.020. Authority.
This chapter is adopted pursuant to the powers vested in the City of South San Francisco under the laws
of the State of California, including, but not limited to, the police powers vested in the City pursuant to
Article XI, Section 7 of the California Constitution and California Labor Code section 1205.
8.77.030. Definitions.
The definitions set forth in this Section shall govern the construction and meaning of the terms used in
this Chapter:
A. "Base Wage" means the hourly wage paid to Covered Employees as of the effective date of this
Chapter less Hazard Pay owed under this Ordinance or any other premium hourly rate already paid to
compensate Covered Employees for working during the pandemic (referred to herein as
"employer -initiated hazard pay").
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File Number. 21-150
B. "City" means the City of South San Francisco.
Enactment Number. ORD 1618-2021
C. "Covered Employee" means any individual who qualifies as an employee entitled to payment of
a minimum wage from any employer under the California minimum wage law, as provided under
Section 1197 of the California Labor Code and wage orders published by the California Industrial
Welfare Commission, and who works in a Grocery Store or a Drug Store on either a full-time or
part-time basis.
D. "Covered Employer" means any Person who (a) directly or indirectly or through an agent or any
other Person owns or operates a Grocery Store or Drug Store, and employs or exercises control over the
wages, hours or working conditions of any Covered Employee; and (b) employs 500 or more employees
nationwide regardless of where those employees are employed. To determine the number of employees
employed by a Grocery Store or Drug Store, the calculation shall be based upon:
a. The actual number of employees who worked for compensation during the two workweeks
preceding the effective date of this chapter; and
b. All employees who worked for compensation shall be counted, including but not limited to:
i. Employees who are not covered by this chapter;
ii. Employees who worked within the geographic limits of the City;
iii. Employees who worked outside the geographic limits of the City; and
iv. Employees who worked in full-time employment, part-time employment, joint employment,
temporary employment, or through the services of a temporary services or staffing agency or
similar entity.
E. "Drug Store" means a retail or wholesale store that is located within the geographic limits of the
City, and that sells primarily a general range of drugs, pharmaceuticals, cosmetics and related products,
including food products, which may be fresh or packaged.
F. "Employer -Initiated Hazard Pay" means a premium hourly rate to compensate Covered
Employees for the hardships and/or risks associated with working during the COVID-19 pandemic. If a
Covered Employer pays such Employer -Initiated Hazard pay on a flat rate basis, the premium hourly
rate is derived by dividing the flat rate payment for a workweek by the number of hours worked in the
workweek.
G "Grocery Store" means (1) a retail or wholesale store that is located within the geographic limits
of the City, and that sells primarily household foodstuffs for offsite consumption, including the sale of
fresh produce, meats, poultry, fish, deli products, dairy products, canned foods, dry foods, beverages,
baked foods, or prepared foods; or (2) a retail or wholesale store that is over 85,000 square feet and with
10% of its sales floor area dedicated to sale of non-taxable foodstuffs including, but not limited to, the
sale of fresh produce, meats, poultry, fish, deli products, dairy products, canned foods, dry foods,
beverages, baked foods and/or prepared foods.
H. "Hazard Pay" means an additional $5.00 per hour wage bonus in addition to each Covered
Employee's Base Wage or Holiday Premium wage for each hour worked within the City.
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File Number: 21-150
Enactment Number: ORD 1618-2021
I. "Holiday Premium" means the hourly wage paid to Covered Employees for performing work
during a holiday or holiday season.
J. "Hours Worked" means the time during which a Covered Employee is subject to the control of a
Covered Employer, including all the time the employee is suffered or permitted to work, and on-call.
K. "Person" means any individual, corporation, partnership, limited partnership, limited liability
partnership, limited liability company, business trust, estate, trust, association, joint venture, agency,
instrumentality, or any other legal or commercial entity, whether domestic or foreign.
L. "Retaliatory Action" means any adverse action taken by an employer that negatively and
significantly affects the terms and conditions of employment, including but not limited to termination,
demotion, suspension, harassment, threats, unequal discipline, reduction in pay (including Base Wage or
Holiday Premium Wages) or work hours, or refusal to hire or promote.
8.77.040. Payment of Hazard Pay to Covered Employees.
A. Hazard Pay. Covered Employers shall pay Covered Employees a wage of no less than the
premium hourly rate set under the authority of this Chapter. The premium hourly rate for each Covered
Employee shall be five dollars ($5.00) per hour for all hours worked at a Grocery Store or Drug Store, in
addition to the Covered Employee's Base Wage or Holiday Premium, whichever is applicable at the time
of hours worked. The Hazard Pay rate shall not include compensation already owed to Covered
Employees, Holiday Premium rates, gratuities, service charge distributions, or other bonuses.
B. Credits. Covered Employers providing employer -initiated hazard pay will be credited for doing
so in accordance with Section 8.77.050.
C. Duration of Hazard Pay. Covered Employers shall pay Hazard Pay to all Covered Employees for
a 90 -day period after the effective date of this Chapter, plus any period of required retroactive Hazard
Pay.
8.77.045 Paid Leave for COVID-19 Vaccination of Covered Employees.
Upon a Covered Employee presenting a Covered Employer with evidence that the Covered Employee
has a confirmed appointment to be vaccinated against COVID-19 during the Covered Employee's
scheduled work hours, the Covered Employer shall provide the Covered Employee with paid leave at the
Covered Employee's rate of pay under Section 8.77.040(A). The paid leave required by this section
shall be in an amount sufficient for the Covered Employee to obtain the vaccination, but shall not exceed
four hours.
8.77.050. Credit for Employer -Initiated Hazard Pay.
A. Employer -Initiated Hazard Pay shall be credited against the five dollars ($5.00) per hour for the
hourly amount paid to each Covered Employee (e.g., a Covered Employer offering two dollars ($2.00)
per hour in Employer -Initiated Hazard Pay owes an additional three dollars ($3.00) per hour in Hazard
Pay per this chapter.)
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Enactment Number. ORD 1618-2021
B. To receive credit for paying a Covered Employee Employer -Initiated Hazard Pay, a Covered
Employer must demonstrate that, as of the effective date of this chapter and in any subsequent covered
workweeks, the Covered Employer paid such Employer -Initiated Hazard Pay to the Covered Employee.
C. No Covered Employer shall be credited prospectively for any past payments. No Covered
Employer shall be credited for any hourly premiums already owed to Covered Employees, such as but
not limited to, Holiday Premiums. Nothing herein shall be interpreted to prohibit any employer from
paying more than five dollars ($5.00) per hour in Hazard Pay.
8.77.060. Waiver
The provisions of this chapter may not be waived by agreement between an individual Covered
Employee and a Covered Employer. All the provisions of this Chapter, or any part thereof, may be
waived in a bona fide collective bargaining agreement, but only if the waiver is explicitly set forth in
such agreement in clear and unambiguous terms.
8.77.070. Prohibitions.
A. It shall be unlawful for a Covered Employer or any other Person to interfere with, restrain or
deny the existence of, or the attempt to exercise, any rights protected under this chapter.
B. Employers shall not take Retaliatory Action or discriminate against any employee or former
employee because the individual has exercised rights protected under this chapter. Such rights include,
but are not limited to, the right to request Hazard Pay pursuant to this chapter; the right to file a
complaint with the city or inform any person about an employer's alleged violation of this chapter; the
right to participate in an investigation, hearing or proceeding or cooperate with or assist the city in its
investigations of alleged violations of this chapter, and the right to inform any person of their rights
under this chapter. Protections of this chapter shall apply to any employee who mistakenly, but in good
faith, alleges noncompliance with this chapter. Taking adverse action against an employee within 90
days of the employee's exercise of rights protected under this chapter shall raise a rebuttable presumption
of having done so in retaliation for the exercise of such rights.
8.77.080. Enforcement
A. Enforcement by the City. A violation of this chapter by a Covered Employer may be remedied by
any means available to remedy a violation of this code.
B. Private Right of Action. A Covered Employee claiming harm from a violation of this chapter
may bring an action against the Covered Employer in court to enforce the provisions of this chapter and
shall be entitled to all remedies available to correct any violation of this chapter, including, but not
limited to, back pay, reinstatement, injunctive relief, or civil penalties as provided herein. A Covered
Employee who is a prevailing party in an action to enforce this chapter is entitled to an award of
reasonable attorney's fees, witness fees and costs.
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Enactment Number. ORD 1618-2021
C. Remedies. The remedies for violation of this chapter include, but are not limited to:
1. Reinstatement, the payment of back wages unlawfully withheld, and payment of an
additional sum as a civil penalty in the amount of fifty dollars to each employee whose rights under this
chapter were violated for each day or portion thereof that the violation occurred or continued, and fines
imposed pursuant to other provisions of state law.
2. Interest on all due and unpaid wages at the rate of interest specified in subdivision (b) of
Section 3289 of the California Civil Code, as amended by state law, which shall accrue from the date
that the wages were due and payable as provided in Part 1 (commencing with Section 200) of Division 2
of the California Labor Code, as amended by state law, to the date the wages are paid in full.
3. Reimbursement of the city's administrative costs of enforcement and reasonable
attorneys' fees, if the city undertakes enforcement action. The remedies, penalties and procedures
provided under this chapter are cumulative and are not intended to be exclusive of any other available
remedies, penalties and procedures established by law which may be pursued to address violations of
this chapter.
8.77.090. Retention of Records.
Each Covered Employer shall maintain for at least three years for each Covered Employee, a record
of his or her or their name, hours worked and pay rate. Each Covered Employer shall provide each
Covered Employee with a copy of the records relating to such employee upon the employee's reasonable
request.
8.77.100. Conflict.
Nothing in this article shall be interpreted or applied to create any power or duty in conflict with any
federal or state law. The term "Conflict," means a conflict that is preemptive under federal or state law.
8.77.110. Notice.
A. The city shall, as expeditiously as possible, publish and make available on its website a notice
suitable for Covered Employers to inform employees of their rights under this emergency chapter. Such
notice shall be translated into Spanish, Chinese, and Tagalog.
B. Every Covered Employer shall, within three days after the city has published and made available
the notice described in subsection A of this section, provide the notice to employees in a manner
calculated to reach all employees, including, but not limited to, posting in a conspicuous place at the
workplace; via electronic communication; or posting in a conspicuous place in a Covered Employer's
web -based or app -based platform. The Covered Employer's notification shall be provided in all
languages spoken by more than ten percent (10%) of Covered Employees.
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Enactment Number. ORD 1618-2021
C. Every Covered Employer shall, within three days after the City has published and made available
the notice described in subsection A of this section or at the time of hire, whichever is later, provide each
Covered Employee the Covered Employer and owner or manager's name; address; and telephone
number. If the information the Covered Employer provided to the Covered Employee changes, the
Covered Employer shall provide the updated information in writing within ten days of the change.
8.77.110. No Preemption of Higher Standards.
The purpose of this Chapter is to ensure minimum labor standards. This Chapter does not preempt
or prevent the establishment of superior employment standards (including higher wages) or the
expansion of coverage by ordinance, resolution, contract, or any other action of the city.
SECTION 4. Emergency Grocery and Drug Store Worker Hazard Pay Sunset
Section 3 of this Ordinance shall remain in effect for 90 days.
SECTION 5. Severability
If any provision or part of this ordinance, or the application thereof to any person or circumstance, is
held invalid or unenforceable by a court of competent jurisdiction, the remainder of the ordinance and
the application of such provision or part to other persons or circumstances shall not be affected thereby.
SECTION 6. Compliance with the California Environmental Quality Act
The City Council hereby finds approval of this ordinance is exempt from the California Environmental
Quality Act (Public Resources Code §§ 21000 et seq., "CEQA," and 14 Cal. Code Reg. §§ 15000 et seq.,
"CEQA Guidelines") under Section 15061(b)(3) of the CEQA guidelines.
SECTION 7. Publication and Effective Date; Retroactive Application
As set forth in the recitals and findings above, this Ordinance is necessary for preserving the public
peace, health, safety and welfare, and is adopted on an urgency basis. Pursuant to the provisions of
Government Code section 36937(b), this Ordinance is effective immediately.
Further, all the provisions of the Ordinance shall be given retrospective application to February 11, 2021,
including the requirement of Hazard Pay for work on and after that date, the prohibitions on certain
conduct by Covered Employers, and the enforcement of the Ordinance.
The City Clerk shall post in the Clerk's Office a certified copy of the full text of this Ordinance along
with the names of those City Council members voting for and against this Ordinance or otherwise
voting.
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File Number. 21-150
Enactment Number., ORD 1618-2021
Introduced and adopted at a regular meeting of the City Council of the City of South San Francisco
held the 24th day of February 2021.
At a meeting of the City Council on 2/24/2021, a motion was made by Councilmember Coleman,
seconded by Councilmember Flores, that this Ordinance be adopted. The motion passed.
Yes: 5 Mayor Addiego, Vice Mayor Nagales, Councilmember Nicolas, Councilmember
Coleman, and Councilmember Flores
Attest by
Rosa Govea Acosta, City Clerk
Mark Addiego, Mayor
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