55°F
weather icon Cloudy
Ad 320x50 | 728x90 | 1200x70

Nevada Senate approves protections for domestic workers

CARSON CITY — Domestic workers who perform household duties would have new protections for working conditions and pay under two bills approved by the Nevada Senate.

Senate Bill 232, called the Domestic Workers’ Bill of Rights, sets in law when household help must be paid overtime. It also limits how much employers can deduct for meals and requires that workers be given at least one full day off per week, and at least two consecutive days off per month.

Sponsored by Democratic Sens. Tick Segerblom, Mark Manendo, Yvanna Cancela and David Parks of Las Vegas, and Joyce Woodhouse of Henderson, SB232 is supported by the Service Employees International Union. It was approved by the Senate on Wednesday on a 12-9 party-line vote, with all Republicans opposed.

If a worker resides at the home where they are employed, the measure caps at no more than five times the minimum hourly wage how much can be deducted from their paycheck for lodging. The current minimum wage $8.25 per hour if the employer does not offer health insurance, and $7.25 if they do.

Additionally, it limits deductions for meals at 25 percent of minimum hourly wage for breakfast and lunch and 50 percent for dinner.

The bill also requires employers to provide a written agreement to workers outlining conditions of their employment.

It entitles workers paid less than one-and-a-half times minimum wage to receive overtime for more than eight hours worked in a day or 40 hours in a week. That provision does not apply to workers who reside in the household.

The bill prohibits an employer from restricting or monitoring a worker’s private communications, or taking documents or other personal effects.

Another measure, Senate Bill 468, was unanimously approved by the Senate on Wednesday. It is sponsored by the Legislative Committee on Senior Citizens, Veterans and Adults with Special Needs.

It sets parameters for live-in domestic service employees at group residential homes and exempts them from overtime only by written agreement.

Both SB232 and SB468 were forwarded to the Assembly.

Contact Sandra Chereb at schereb@reviewjournal.com or 775-461-3821. Follow @SandraChereb on Twitter.

Don't miss the big stories. Like us on Facebook.
MORE STORIES
THE LATEST
Lawsuit challenges Nevada’s new diabetes drug disclosure law

Two pharmaceutical groups have filed a lawsuit in federal court challenging the constitutionality of a bill passed by the 2017 Nevada Legislature requiring disclosure of the pricing of diabetes drugs.

Nevada Legislature approves final payment for ESA software

The final action on Nevada’s controversial private school choice program came Thursday when the Legislature’s Interim Finance Committee approved $105,000 to pay off the remaining costs incurred by a vendor who was working on the development of software to implement the program.

 
Recall targets a third Nevada senator

A third recall petition against a female Nevada state senator was filed Wednesday.

Federal government approves Nevada’s education plan

Nevada is among four states to get U.S. Education Department approval of its plan as required under a new federal education law, the Every Student Succeeds Act, or ESSA.