NYC Democrats Try To Quietly Destroy "Public Job Salary Range Law" Going In Effect In Next Month

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Salary Disclosure In NYC: Not So Fast, Say Some on City Council
Amendments to a salary transparency law would curb unintended consequences, business leaders claim. But advocates warn it would “gut” the law.

BY YOAV GONENYGONEN@THECITY.NYC APR 4, 2022, 8:30PM EDT

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A restaurant on Nostrand Avenue in Bed-Stuy, Brooklyn, advertises for new workers, Feb. 10. 2022.

Amendments to a salary transparency law would curb unintended consequences, business leaders claim. But advocates warn it would “gut” the law.

Just weeks before a new law takes effect requiring most employers to post salary ranges in help wanted ads, City Council members are moving to postpone it — and make changes that the law’s proponents warn would “gut” the measure’s aim to promote equal pay.

Business leaders say the revisions, slated for a public hearing on Tuesday, are the least the Council can do to head off what they warn could be unintended effects.

The salary transparency law, which garnered the approval of 41 of 51 members in the final days of the Council’s last term, mandates that businesses with five or more employees post a “good faith” minimum and maximum salary in advertisements for job openings.

The measure was intended to advance pay equity, in part by giving job-seekers a leg up in negotiations over wages, while spurring transparency from employers.

In New York City, white women earn 84 cents on average for every dollar earned by white men, according to a December 2021 committee report by the City Council. The figures are 63 cents per dollar for Asian women, 55 cents for African American women and 46 cents for Latina women.

The new amendments, sponsored by Councilmembers Nantasha Williams (D-Queens) and Justin Brannan (D-Brooklyn), would exclude businesses with fewer than 15 employees, allow for hiring notices that don’t specify a position to exclude salary info, and exempt remote positions that can be done outside New York City.

The bill would also delay implementation, which is being overseen by the city’s Human Rights Commission, from May 15 to November 1. The commission has already released guidance.

Advocates for pay equity who supported the new law say the changes would create massive carve-outs under the guise of making minor calibrations, excluding tens of thousands of businesses.

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Hundreds of public sector community service workers rallied outside City Hall to demand increased pay, March 10, 2022.
Ben Fractenberg/THE CITY
“The amendments being proposed really gut the law — the intent and the impact and the scope of the law,” said Beverly Neufeld, president of the advocacy group PowHer New York, which promotes women’s economic equality. “Turning our back on this — it’s really not what we expect of our progressive, majority-female City Council.”

Business Concerns
Business leaders say the pay transparency law posed a host of problems that never got fully aired because the bill was rushed from public hearing to vote over a two-week period in December.

Members and sponsors make THE CITY possible.

It became law automatically after 30 days without the signature of outgoing Mayor Bill de Blasio or incoming Mayor Eric Adams.

Kathryn Wylde, president of the business group Partnership for New York City, said small businesses don’t often have established pay bands — instead offering what they can afford based on an applicant’s range of skills and experience.

Among the other concerns, she said larger businesses risk getting out-bid by competitors if they make their salary ceilings public. She said the public postings could also spark salary inflation during a hiring crunch when current workers see a maximum posted that’s much higher than what it’s been historically.

“We all agree that pay parity is a good thing,” said Wylde, whose organization represents about 300 company leaders. “Implementation is difficult — so we’re hoping that the new Council will feel they can be a little more thoughtful about responding to some of the concerns.”

Wylde and her organization have lobbied two high-ranking officials in the Eric Adams administration regarding the proposed bill — intergovernmental affairs director Roberto Perez, and counsel to the mayor Brendan McGuire, according to city lobbying records.

City Hall spokesperson Kate Smart said the mayor’s office is reviewing the proposed bill.

City Council press secretary Breanna Mulligan said Tuesday’s hearing will allow members to “hear from all stakeholders about how the salary transparency law can be most effectively implemented to address salary inequities for women and people of color.”

Council Speaker Adrienne Adams (D-Queens) was among the members who voted in favor of the disclosure law in December, before she was named speaker by her colleagues a month later.

Adrienne Adams also appeared at a rally at City Hall last month on Equal Pay Day, where she highlighted the disparities in pay between women and men.

Bill sponsor Williams, who chairs the Committee on Civil and Human Rights, didn’t respond to a request for comment.

States in Play on Pay
In 2018, California enacted a pay transparency law that required companies to provide salary information — but only upon request from a job applicant.

More recently, states have passed laws that require a more proactive release of salary information, although not necessarily for public dissemination.

Colorado enacted a law last year that, like New York City’s, requires salary ranges to be posted in job listings.

Meanwhile, New York City has already taken steps toward rolling out the new law.

Last month, the city Human Rights Commission published guidance on which city businesses and nonprofits are covered by the new law and how they need to implement it.

The notice warns that fines can reach $125,000, while willful violations can be punished with fines of up to $250,000.

When it comes to the proposed changes to the city’s law, advocates say the exclusion of companies with five to 14 workers alone would exempt roughly 50,000 employers.

They also worry that an exemption for ads that don’t specify which position is being hired for would create a giant loophole for any firms seeking to evade the new requirements.

“While the amendments are being sold as innocuous tweaks, when you read them closely they would essentially undo much of [the new law],” said Seher Khawaja, senior counsel for Legal Momentum, a national advocacy group for girls and women. “We think it would really undermine the impact of the law by excluding a large sector of New York’s workforce from the protections.”

Salary Disclosure In NYC: Not So Fast, Say Some on City Council
 
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NYC Salary Transparency Law in Question as Businesses Push Back
City Council may delay landmark change until November, limit scope.

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A "Now Hiring" sign outside a Home Depot store in New York.Photographer: Jeenah Moon/Bloomberg

By Jeff Green

April 5, 2022, 10:30 AM EDTUpdated onApril 5, 2022, 3:50 PM EDT

The New York City Council may make significant changes to its landmark salary transparency law before it even takes effect — including delaying enforcement by six months to November.

New York City had set May 15 as the deadline for every job posting to list the minimum and maximum salary for each position. The rule applies to jobs that are remote or in-person, salaried or hourly, that will be performed in the city by an employee working for a company with four or more employees.

In an hours-long meeting on Tuesday, the Council Committee on Civil and Human Rights discussed an amendment that would exempt companies with fewer than 15 employees, exclude certain positions and move the effective date to Nov. 1. The changes would also allow businesses to post general “help wanted” listings, without a specific role, and not include salary information.

The proposed amendment was laid over by the committee, meaning the action was postponed on the bill, as lawmakers weigh testimony from small business owners and other corporate leaders who came out to advocate for the changes.

Business Pushback
New York’s five borough chambers of commerce and the Partnership for New York City, a business group composed of the city’s largest companies, including JPMorgan Chase & Co. and Goldman Sachs Group Inc., pushed back against the law and said many of the 200,000 businesses and 30,000 nonprofit organizations have little knowledge of the legislation ahead of the May 15 deadline.

They said the salary disclosure law was passed “without any meaningful public input or consultation with employers,” according to an April 4 letter to the City Council. “It also comes in the middle of a local labor shortage, particularly in those sectors most impacted by the pandemic: health care, retail, and food services.”

In the letter, the group outlined that compensation offered during the tight labor marker may be higher than what other employees are making. In the corporate sector, they said employers seeking to diversify their executive teams may offer higher compensation for people of color. To that end, they are seeking exemptions for employers in industries with severe labor shortages and clarification that the law applies only to jobs that are located at least partly in New York City.

“During a labor shortage, or in the context of achieving diversity goals, the posted maximum may be significantly higher than the historical salary ranges, creating dissatisfaction in the workforce and demands to adjust existing pay scales that the employer may be unable to afford,” the group said.

Pay Gap
Women get closest to pay parity in Rhode Island, largest disparity in Utah

Source: U.S. Census Bureau Current Population Survey

Note: Data refer to women's earnings as a percentage of men's of employed full-time wage and salary workers who usually work 35 hours or more per week.
Creating Loopholes
PowHer New York, a nonprofit that pushed for the original law, is opposing the amendment as “dangerous,” creating loopholes that would allow many employers to avoid compliance. In a press conference before the hearing on Tuesday, supporters of the law, including Gloria Middleton, president of CWA 1180 labor union that represents 9,000 active workers and 6,000 retirees in the city, urged the City Council to reject the changes and let the law take effect as scheduled.

The ultimate goal of pay transparency laws is to help reduce a stubborn pay gap between men and women — particularly women of color. States and cities are also increasingly prohibiting companies from asking candidates what they earned in previous jobs.

At least seven states now require companies to produce salary information with job postings, or upon the request of job seekers. Colorado, Nevada, Connecticut, California, Washington, and Maryland have laws with some form of salary-range disclosure required. Rhode Island will join them in January 2023. Similar laws are under consideration in Massachusetts and South Carolina. New York is the first major metropolitan city in the U.S. to enact such legislation.

Public Hearing
The time available for business owners to get ready pay disclosure was insufficient, especially for minority business owners, said Kathryn Wylde, CEO of Partnership for New York City. With more than 200,000 open jobs in the city, the business community is wary of any regulations that will complicate hiring or open companies up to litigation if they pay more than the advertised maximum to hire out-of-state or among under-represented groups, Wylde said.

Some minority small business owners testified about concerns that publishing pay ranges would allow larger competitors to outbid them for talent in the tight job market.

“If I publish a maximum salary for an engineer, my majority-owned competitors will easily outbid me,” said Barbara Kushner, who owns a construction management company.

But depriving potential employees of pay information, particularly women and people of color who are already underpaid, puts them at a disadvantage, said Andrea Johnson, director of state policy and workplace justice at the National Women’s Law Center.

“Providing the salary range helps narrow gender wage gaps that otherwise might be possible in negotiation where the salary range isn’t disclosed,” she said.

Raising the minimum size of companies that must follow the law to 15 workers from four would put the rule out of sync with the rest of New York’s discrimination rules, which apply to businesses with four or more workers, said New York State Senator Jessica Ramos, who has proposed a similar state law patterned after the New York City rule. "On its face, it weakens the law," she said.

The change would also mean that about 58,000 companies employing 500,000 people would be exempt from salary disclosure, said Debipriya Chatterjee, a senior economist for the nonprofit Community Service Society of New York.

For Elizabeth Stone, a New York waitress, the lack of salary information makes it difficult to know whether she should change jobs or demand more from her current employer.

“I deserve to know what I can make as a waitress in Brooklyn,” she said at the hearing.
NYC Salary Transparency Law in Question as Businesses Push Back
 

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Had a recruiter accidently tell me the max the company could give me and promised me if I was hired I'd get that much. During negotiations, the project manager told me a number 10k less than that number. Told him "based on my qualifications, I'm worth ...., and the recruiter told me what you guys are willing to give" dude got quiet so fast. Got hired, everyone that got hired after me, I asked for their wages, and it was about 10k less than me.
 
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