Strike everything after the enacting clause and insert the following:
"
NEW SECTION. Sec. 1. A new section is added to chapter
49.12 RCW to read as follows:
(1) An employer shall provide employees with meal and rest periods as required by law, subject to the following:
(a) Rest periods must be scheduled at any point during each work period during which the employee is required to receive a rest period;
(b) Employers must provide employees with uninterrupted meal and rest breaks. This subsection (1)(b) does not apply in the case of:
(i) An unforeseeable emergent circumstance, as defined in RCW
49.28.130; or
(ii) A clinical circumstance, as determined by the employee, employer, or employer's designee, that may lead to a significant adverse effect on the patient's condition:
(A) Without the knowledge, specific skill, or ability of the employee on break; or
(B) Due to an unforeseen or unavoidable event relating to patient care delivery requiring immediate action that could not be planned for by an employer;
(c) For any rest break that is interrupted before ten complete minutes by an employer or employer's designee under the provisions of (b)(ii) of this subsection, the employee must be given an additional ten minute uninterrupted rest break at the earliest reasonable time during the work period during which the employee is required to receive a rest period. If the elements of this subsection are met, a rest break shall be considered taken for the purposes of the minimum wage act as defined by chapter
49.46 RCW.
(2) The employer shall provide a mechanism to record when an employee misses a meal or rest period and maintain these records.
(3) The definitions in this subsection apply throughout this section unless the context clearly requires otherwise.
(a) "Employee" means a person who:
(i) Is employed by a health care facility;
(ii) Is involved in direct patient care activities or clinical services;
(iii) Receives an hourly wage or is covered by a collective bargaining agreement;
(iv) Is a licensed practical nurse or registered nurse licensed under chapter
18.79 RCW, a surgical technologist registered under chapter
18.215 RCW, a diagnostic radiologic technologist or cardiovascular invasive specialist certified under chapter
18.84 RCW, a respiratory care practitioner licensed under chapter
18.89 RCW, or a nursing assistant-certified as defined in RCW
18.88A.020.
(b) "Employer" means hospitals licensed under chapter
70.41 RCW, except that hospitals certified as a critical access hospital under 42 U.S.C. Sec. 1395i-4 or hospitals with fewer than twenty-five acute care beds in operation are excluded until July 1, 2020.
Sec. 2. RCW
49.28.130 and 2011 c 251 s 1 are each amended to read as follows:
The definitions in this section apply throughout this section and RCW
49.28.140 and
49.28.150 unless the context clearly requires otherwise.
(1)
(a) "Employee" means a ((
licensed practical nurse or a registered nurse licensed under chapter 18.79 RCW))
person who:(i) Is employed by a health care facility ((who));
(ii) Is involved in direct patient care activities or clinical services ((and));
(iii) Receives an hourly wage or is covered by a collective bargaining agreement;
(iv) Is a licensed practical nurse or registered nurse licensed under chapter 18.79 RCW; and (v) Beginning July 1, 2020, is a surgical technologist registered under chapter 18.215 RCW, a diagnostic radiologic technologist or cardiovascular invasive specialist certified under chapter 18.84 RCW, a respiratory care practitioner licensed under chapter 18.89 RCW, or a nursing assistant-certified as defined in RCW 18.88A.020. (b) "Employee" does not mean a person who:
(i) Is employed by a health care facility as defined in subsection (3)(a)(v) of this section; and
(ii) Is a surgical technologist registered under chapter 18.215 RCW, a diagnostic radiologic technologist or cardiovascular invasive specialist certified under chapter 18.84 RCW, a respiratory care practitioner licensed under chapter 18.89 RCW, or a certified nursing assistant as defined in RCW 18.88A.020.
(2) "Employer" means an individual, partnership, association, corporation, the state, a political subdivision of the state, or person or group of persons, acting directly or indirectly in the interest of a health care facility.
(3)(a) "Health care facility" means the following facilities, or any part of the facility, including such facilities if owned and operated by a political subdivision or instrumentality of the state, that operate on a twenty-four hours per day, seven days per week basis:
(i) Hospices licensed under chapter
70.127 RCW;
(ii) Hospitals licensed under chapter
70.41 RCW
, except that until July 1, 2020, the provisions of section 3, chapter . . ., Laws of 2019 (section 3 of this act) do not apply to hospitals certified as a critical access hospital under 42 U.S.C. Sec. 1395i-4 or hospitals with fewer than twenty-five acute care beds in operation;
(iii) Rural health care facilities as defined in RCW
70.175.020;
(iv) Psychiatric hospitals licensed under chapter
71.12 RCW; or
(v) Facilities owned and operated by the department of corrections or by a governing unit as defined in RCW
70.48.020 in a correctional institution as defined in RCW
9.94.049 that provide health care services ((
to inmates as defined in RCW 72.09.015)).
(b) If a nursing home regulated under chapter
18.51 RCW or a home health agency regulated under chapter
70.127 RCW is operating under the license of a health care facility, the nursing home or home health agency is considered part of the health care facility for the purposes of this subsection.
(4) "Overtime" means the hours worked in excess of an agreed upon, predetermined, regularly scheduled shift within a twenty-four hour period not to exceed twelve hours in a twenty-four hour period or eighty hours in a consecutive fourteen-day period.
(5) "On-call time" means time spent by an employee who is not working on the premises of the place of employment but who is compensated for availability or who, as a condition of employment, has agreed to be available to return to the premises of the place of employment on short notice if the need arises.
(6) "Reasonable efforts" means that the employer, to the extent reasonably possible, does all of the following but is unable to obtain staffing coverage:
(a) Seeks individuals to volunteer to work extra time from all available qualified staff who are working;
(b) Contacts qualified employees who have made themselves available to work extra time;
(c) Seeks the use of per diem staff; and
(d) Seeks personnel from a contracted temporary agency when such staffing is permitted by law or an applicable collective bargaining agreement, and when the employer regularly uses a contracted temporary agency.
(7) "Unforeseeable emergent circumstance" means (a) any unforeseen declared national, state, or municipal emergency; (b) when a health care facility disaster plan is activated; or (c) any unforeseen disaster or other catastrophic event which substantially affects or increases the need for health care services.
Sec. 3. RCW
49.28.140 and 2002 c 112 s 3 are each amended to read as follows:
(1) No employee of a health care facility may be required to work overtime. Attempts to compel or force employees to work overtime are contrary to public policy, and any such requirement contained in a contract, agreement, or understanding is void.
(2) The acceptance by any employee of overtime is strictly voluntary, and the refusal of an employee to accept such overtime work is not grounds for discrimination, dismissal, discharge, or any other penalty, threat of reports for discipline, or employment decision adverse to the employee.
(3) This section does not apply to overtime work that occurs:
(a) Because of any unforeseeable emergent circumstance;
(b) Because of prescheduled on-call time, subject to the following:
(i) Mandatory prescheduled on-call time may not be used in lieu of scheduling employees to work regularly scheduled shifts when a staffing plan indicates the need for a scheduled shift; and
(ii) Mandatory prescheduled on-call time may not be used to address regular changes in patient census or acuity or expected increases in the number of employees not reporting for predetermined scheduled shifts;
(c) When the employer documents that the employer has used reasonable efforts to obtain staffing. An employer has not used reasonable efforts if overtime work is used to fill vacancies resulting from chronic staff shortages; or
(d) When an employee is required to work overtime to complete a patient care procedure already in progress where the absence of the employee could have an adverse effect on the patient.
(4) An employee accepting overtime who works more than twelve consecutive hours shall be provided the option to have at least eight consecutive hours of uninterrupted time off from work following the time worked.
Clarifies that if a rest break is interrupted by an employer or employer's designee the employee is given an additional ten minute break during the period the employee is required to receive a break, and if this condition is met the break is considered taken for the purposes of the minimum wage act.
Clarifies the record keeping provision and eliminates the reference to the L&I.
Delays the effective date of the meal and rest break provisions and the new overtime provisions for hospitals certified as a critical access hospital and hospitals with fewer than twenty-five acute care beds in operation, until July 1, 2020.
Delays the effective date of overtime provision for surgical technologists, diagnostic radiologic technologists, cardiovascular invasive specialists, respiratory care practitioners, and certified nursing assistants until July 1, 2020.
Modifies the provisions regarding the use of prescheduled on-call time to prohibit its mandatory use: In lieu of scheduling employees to work regularly scheduled shifts when a staffing plan indicates the need for a scheduled shift; and when used to address regular changes in patient census or acuity or expected increases in the number of employees not reporting for predetermined scheduled shifts.
Deletes the provision that prohibited an employer from scheduling nonemergency procedures that would require overtime.
Provides that an employee accepting overtime, who works more than twelve consecutive hours shall be provided the option to have at least eight consecutive hours of uninterrupted time off from work following the time worked.
Deletes the section that allowed an employer to seek a variance of the new provisions from the director of L&I.
Provides the act takes effect on January 1, 2020.