Congress Readies Vote on 40-Hour Legislation

NACS-supported legislation is coming to up for a vote on Thursday — make your voices heard through the NACS grassroots website.

April 02, 2014

WASHINGTON – Congress is voting on legislation that could be very important to your business. On Thursday, April 3, the U.S. House of Representatives will vote on H.R. 2575, the Save American Workers (SAW) Act, that seeks to redefine a full-time worker under Obamacare as an employee who works 40 hours a week and not 30 hours a week, which is currently the standard.

You can encourage your representative to vote for H.R. 2575, which would return the definition of a full time employee to the traditional 40 hours per week threshold. This change would make it significantly easier to provide flexible schedules and better manage your workforce.

To date more than 840 convenience store industry stakeholders have sent more than 1,030 letters to 311 U.S. representatives. NACS encourages members to continue sending letters and ask Congress to vote “yes” on H.R. 2575. Our grassroots system will identify your legislators based on your business and home address.

NACS supports H.R. 2575 because it amends the health-care law to establish 40 hours per week as the threshold for determining full-time employment. Also, aligning the health-care law’s definition of full-time employee status with current levels would help avoid any unnecessary disruptions to employees' wages and hours, and would provide significant relief to employers.

Furthermore, increasing Obamacare’s 30-hour per week definition for full-time status would:

  • Make it easier for employers to provide more hours to all employees, thereby increasing their take-home pay.
  • Help employers offer more generous health-care coverage to full-time employees without making premiums prohibitive.
  • Help ensure that lower-income employees have access to more affordable health-care coverage options.

Make your voice heard today — it only takes 2 minutes to tell your members of Congress to support H.R. 2575.

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