click to enlarge Sanford Nowlin
AFL-CIO's Linda Chavez Thompson fires up the crowd in front of City Hall last year after Working Texans for Paid Sick Time delivered its signed petitions to city officials.
Once again, a lawsuit has halted San Antonio's paid sick leave ordinance.
State District Judge Peter Sakai on Friday morning stopped the rule from taking effect on December 1 while he deliberates whether it violates state law, the
Texas Tribune reports.
City council approved the latest version of the ordinance in October, but business groups sued, arguing that the measure violates Texas' constitution by imposing compensation rules on employers beyond the minimum wage law.
The original ordinance was supposed to take effect August 1, but it too was delayed after business groups filed an earlier legal challenge.
Council voted to adopt the first version last year after a petition drive collected more than 140,000 signatures in support. An estimated 354,000 San Antonio workers don't have paid sick leave.
“We respectfully disagree with the Court’s decision to enjoin the ordinance," San Antonio City Attorney Andy Segovia said in a statement supplied to the
Tribune. "We will evaluate our legal options going forward, including appealing this decision to the Fourth Court of Appeals."
In a statement, Mayor Ron Nirenberg said he's waiting to hear an analysis from Segovia but remains "steadfast" in his support of the ordinance.
"Today's injunction is an attack on the hundreds of thousands of working people in San Antonio who fought for the right to paid sick time," said Drew Galloway, executive director of MOVE Texas, which participated in the petition drive. "This corporate-interest lawsuit subverts the will of the people of San Antonio to prioritize profits over people."
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