2025 -- H 5047 | |
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LC000463 | |
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STATE OF RHODE ISLAND | |
IN GENERAL ASSEMBLY | |
JANUARY SESSION, A.D. 2025 | |
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A N A C T | |
RELATING TO LABOR AND LABOR RELATIONS -- WAREHOUSE WORKER | |
PROTECTION ACT | |
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Introduced By: Representatives Shanley, Craven, O'Brien, Dawson, Solomon, McEntee, | |
Date Introduced: January 15, 2025 | |
Referred To: House Labor | |
It is enacted by the General Assembly as follows: | |
1 | SECTION 1. Legislative findings. |
2 | The general assembly finds and declares the following: |
3 | (1) The rapid growth of just-in-time logistics and same- and next-day consumer package |
4 | delivery, and advances in technology used for tracking employee productivity, have led to a rise in |
5 | the number of warehouse and distribution center workers, who are subject to quantified work |
6 | quotas. |
7 | (2) Warehouse and distribution center employees who work under those quotas are |
8 | expected to complete a quantified number of tasks within specific time periods, often measured |
9 | down to the minute or second, and face adverse employment action, including suspension or |
10 | termination, if they fail to do so. |
11 | (3) Those quotas generally do not allow for workers to comply with safety guidelines or to |
12 | recover from strenuous activity during productive work time, leaving warehouse and distribution |
13 | center employees who work under them at high risk of injury and illness. |
14 | (4) The quotas under which warehouse and distribution center employees regularly work |
15 | also affect their compensation. California and many cities require employers to pay their employees |
16 | a minimum-wage rate. Warehouse and distribution center employees who work under a quota, |
17 | however, do not receive the full benefit of minimum wages if their quota is increased to make up |
18 | for the direct or indirect effect of a minimum-wage increase. |
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1 | (5) Quotas in occupations that are already physically demanding not only increase |
2 | accidents, but they also incentivize unsafe work. The workforce in warehouse and logistics is |
3 | largely comprised of people of color who depend upon these jobs to provide for their families and |
4 | often see no alternative but to prioritize quota compliance over their own safety. These workers |
5 | end up working faster than is healthy in order to keep their jobs. |
6 | (6) Workplace injuries can take a terrible toll on workers, their families and their |
7 | communities, and can create substantial costs for employers. According to the most recent data |
8 | (2020) released by the Bureau of Labor Statistics, the warehouse industry itself reports a rate of |
9 | serious work-related injuries involving lost time or restricted duty (4.0 cases/100 full-time workers) |
10 | that is more than twice the average injury rates for all private industry (1.7 cases/100 full-time |
11 | workers). The most common types of work-related serious injury reported by employers in the |
12 | warehouse sector are musculoskeletal injuries, which often require workers to miss work and can |
13 | force workers permanently out of the job and even out of the workforce. |
14 | SECTION 2. Title 28 of the General Laws entitled "LABOR AND LABOR RELATIONS" |
15 | is hereby amended by adding thereto the following chapter: |
16 | CHAPTER 61 |
17 | WAREHOUSE WORKER PROTECTION ACT |
18 | 28-61-1. Short title. |
19 | This chapter shall be known and may be cited as the "Warehouse Worker Protection Act". |
20 | 28-61-2. Definitions. |
21 | As used in this chapter: |
22 | (1) "Defined time period" means any unit of time measurement equal to or less than the |
23 | duration of an employee's shift, and includes hours, minutes, and seconds and any fraction thereof. |
24 | (2) "Director" means director of the department of labor and training. |
25 | (3) "Department" means the department of labor and training. |
26 | (4) "Employee" means a nonexempt employee who works at a warehouse distribution |
27 | center. |
28 | (5)(i) "Employee work speed data" means information an employer collects, stores, |
29 | analyzes, or interprets relating to an individual employee's performance of a quota, including, but |
30 | not limited to, quantities of tasks performed, quantities of items or materials handled or produced, |
31 | rates or speeds of tasks performed, measurements or metrics of employee performance in relation |
32 | to a quota, and time categorized as performing tasks or not performing tasks. |
33 | (ii) "Employee work speed data" does not include qualitative performance assessments, |
34 | personnel records, or itemized wage statements, except for any content of those records that |
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1 | includes employee work speed data, as defined in this definition. |
2 | (6) "Employer" means a person who directly or indirectly, or through an agent or any other |
3 | person, including through the services of a third-party employer, temporary service, or staffing |
4 | agency or similar entity, employs or exercises control over the wages, hours, or working conditions |
5 | of one hundred (100) or more employees at a single warehouse distribution center or one thousand |
6 | (1,000) or more employees at one or more warehouse distribution centers in the state. |
7 | (7) "Person" means an individual, corporation, partnership, limited partnership, limited |
8 | liability partnership, limited liability company, business trust, estate, trust, association, joint |
9 | venture, agency, instrumentality, or any other legal or commercial entity, whether domestic or |
10 | foreign. |
11 | (8) "Quota" means a work standard under which an employee is assigned or required to |
12 | perform at a specified productivity speed, or perform a quantified number of tasks, or to handle or |
13 | produce a quantified amount of material, within a defined time period and under which the |
14 | employee may suffer an adverse employment action, if the employee fails to complete the |
15 | performance standard. |
16 | (9)(i) "Warehouse distribution center" means an establishment as defined by any of the |
17 | following North American Industry Classification System (NAICS) Codes, however that |
18 | establishment is denominated: |
19 | (A) 493110 for General Warehousing and Storage. |
20 | (B) 423 for Merchant Wholesalers, Durable Goods. |
21 | (C) 424 for Merchant Wholesalers, Nondurable Goods. |
22 | (D) 454110 for Electronic Shopping and Mail-Order Houses. |
23 | 28-61-3. Disclosure of quotas. |
24 | (a) Each employer shall provide to each employee, upon hire, a written description of each |
25 | quota to which the employee is subject, including the quantified number of tasks to be performed |
26 | or materials to be produced or handled, within the defined time period, and any potential adverse |
27 | employment action that could result from the failure to meet the quota. The requirement to disclose |
28 | also applies to any changes in the quota. |
29 | (b) Nothing in this section requires an employer to use quotas or monitor work speed data. |
30 | An employer that does not monitor this data, has no obligation to provide it. |
31 | 28-61-4. Meal and rest periods. |
32 | An employee shall not be required to meet a quota that prevents compliance with meal or |
33 | rest periods, use of bathroom facilities, including reasonable travel time to and from bathroom |
34 | facilities, or occupational health and safety laws in the labor laws or department standards. An |
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1 | employer shall not take adverse employment action against an employee for failure to meet a quota |
2 | that does not allow a worker to comply with meal and rest periods, use of bathroom facilities, or |
3 | occupational health and safety laws, labor laws, or for failure to meet a quota that has not been |
4 | disclosed to an employee. |
5 | 28-61-5. Employee information request. |
6 | Employees may request from the employer the written description of the quota, and a copy |
7 | of the employee's own speed data as well as the aggregated work speed data for comparable |
8 | employees working in the facility. |
9 | 28-61-6. Unlawful retaliation. |
10 | There shall be a rebuttable presumption of unlawful retaliation if an employer in any |
11 | manner discriminates, retaliates, or takes any adverse action against any employee because an |
12 | employee exercises their rights pursuant to this chapter. |
13 | 28-61-7. Severability. |
14 | The provisions of this chapter are severable. If any provision or its application is held |
15 | invalid, that invalidity shall not affect other provisions or applications that can be given effect |
16 | without the invalid provision or application. |
17 | SECTION 3. This act shall take effect upon passage. |
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EXPLANATION | |
BY THE LEGISLATIVE COUNCIL | |
OF | |
A N A C T | |
RELATING TO LABOR AND LABOR RELATIONS -- WAREHOUSE WORKER | |
PROTECTION ACT | |
*** | |
1 | This act would require employers to provide each employee, defined as a nonexempt |
2 | employee who works at a warehouse distribution center, upon hire, with a written description of |
3 | each quota to which the employee is subject, including the quantified number of tasks to be |
4 | performed or materials to be produced or handled, within the defined time period and any potential |
5 | adverse employment action that could result from failure to meet the quota. |
6 | This act would take effect upon passage. |
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