Lawmakers approve proposal to require non-unionized stores to kick in health care costs for employeesBY CHAU LAM AND EMI ENDO
Newsday staff writers
September 28, 2005
Suffolk lawmakers overwhelmingly passed a bill yesterday that requires large non-unionized grocery retailers to set aside money to pay for their employees' health-care costs.
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The measure, sponsored by Legis. William Lindsay (D-Holbrook), passed 17-1, with more than enough votes to override a veto if Suffolk County Executive Steve Levy chooses not to support it.
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"It's great. It's wonderful. We applaud the legislators for their bipartisan cooperation," said Kris LaGrange, a spokesman for the Long Island Federation of Labor, representing 250,000 union members, including those working in the grocery industry.
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The measure requires companies to allocate at least $3 for every hour an employee worked and the money would go to pay employees' health care costs.