The following is presented as part of The Columbian’s Opinion content, which offers a point of view in order to provoke thought and debate of civic issues. Opinions represent the viewpoint of the author. Unsigned editorials represent the consensus opinion of The Columbian’s editorial board, which operates independently of the news department.
The Seattle City Council’s decision to force big grocery store chains into paying $4 an hour coronavirus hazard pay is turning into a typical Seattle government story.
Ram through unfunded mandate on business with little input. Get sued. Then portray the squawking businesses as cruel.
“Please — pay the workers, not the lawyers,” Mayor Jenny Durkan scolded the city’s grocery stores after they challenged the new hazard pay law in court. Hazard pay, she said, “is the right thing to do for our workers.”
What do you mean by “our?”
The head of PCC Markets, who is new around here, made the rookie mistake of poking her head up to suggest that her independent cooperative may have trouble affording $4 an hour more (the mandate applies to groceries with more than 500 employees companywide, which PCC has). But PCC had already paid out twice last year’s total profits in COVID costs and bonuses, she said, so this, coming a year into the pandemic, seems … ill-timed and unsustainable?
She got her head chopped right off.
“What happened to PCC? When did you turn against your workers?” read one of the many flaming tweets aimed at the company, along with others demanding that she resign (she’s been on the job all of six weeks). Some sent photos of PCC member cards being cut in two with scissors.
I’m not new here, but for some reason I’m going to poke my head up anyway to say: It didn’t have to be this way.
Front-line workers out there risking COVID deserve hazard pay, full stop. This has been abundantly clear since March, when we shut down and most of us worked from home while the health care workers, the bus drivers, the fruit pickers, the cops, the grocery checkers and others kept at it, often in crowded conditions that risked disease.
The pandemic is a societywide emergency that uniquely demonstrates why we need the government safety net. Yet government, at all levels, has repeatedly failed to provide much support at all to front-line workers.
“Despite early political momentum and a clear rationale to do so, the U.S. Congress has not passed any government-funded hazard pay for front-line workers during the pandemic,” the Brookings Institution in D.C. wrote in a report last week.
Some states did. But where was that kind of collaborative effort here? Yes, we have a few companies like Amazon making record profits off the pandemic, but most businesses have had to remake what they do and are eking along. Why not work with them to try to get hazard pay to a wider range of workers?
The city could offer businesses tax credits in exchange for giving workers hazard pay. The state could steer federal relief money toward workers. So far, the federal government has allocated Washington state about $5 billion in COVID relief funds, but little has gone to front-line worker pay.
The $1.9 trillion pandemic relief package being debated in Congress contains excellent unemployment aid, but nothing for hazard pay for front-line workers. Local and state governments could dedicate some of their funds to this cause.
We all recall the pandemic cliche, “We’re all in this together.” In Seattle, we are so not all in it together that now a grocery bagger at a big chain store like Safeway gets a $4 an hour pay boost, while a grocery bagger at a smaller neighborhood market or a convenience store gets nothing. Why? Nothing to do with coronavirus hazard, or how thankful we are. Everything to do with how politically it was the easy way out to just make somebody else pay for it.
In the fall, I wrote that our state and local governments deserved an “A” grade for the health side of this pandemic. They still do. We rank 44th out of the 50 states in per capita COVID-19 deaths. That’s a public health triumph.
But as to working creatively with the state’s businesses to keep the economy running, they don’t even get a grade. They’re marked absent for barely trying.
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