Skip to content

Back to Our Blog

What Employers Need to Know About the HERO Act

Blog Categories

Kristine Bieniek

May 24, 2021

Recently, Governor Cuomo signed the NY HERO Act, a bill that creates new workplace safety requirements. This legislation will have wide-ranging implications for employers across the state. The BNP strongly advocated for changes to make this legislation less burdensome. Now that it has become law, it is important for employers to understand how the HERO Act will impact them.

What Does it Do?

  • Airborne Infectious Disease Exposure Prevention Standards. The bill requires the state Departments of Labor and Health to develop new workplace disease prevention standards, governing:
    • health screening
    • masks and PPE
    • handwashing
    • surface disinfecting
    • social distancing
    • quarantines and isolation

The state will publish industry-specific guidelines. Then, every employer is required to create a workplace safety plan by adopting the state model for their industry or by creating their own standard that meets the state’s minimum requirements. Employers will then be required to adhere to these plans at all times – even after the pandemic ends. Noncompliance will be costly: the state will fine employers $50/day for failure to adopt a safety plan. Employers who violate their safety plan can be liable for fines between $1,000-$10,000. This provision is expected to take effect July 4th.

  • Workplace Safety Committees. The bill requires every workplace with 10+ employees to form a workplace safety committee. The committee must meet quarterly and be composed of employer and employee designees. These committees are tasked with raising health and safety concerns to their employer, to which employers. must respond. This requirement takes effect November 1st.

What action did BNP take?

The BNP was active in pushing back against this legislation after hearing concerns from numerous members. Throughout the pandemic, businesses have shown an ability to follow rapidly-changing public health guidelines and adjust their operations in real time, and the state’s own data has shown a very small amount of COVID-19 transmissions at workplaces. Instead of acknowledging businesses’ ability to protect employees, this bill adds duplicative and costly requirements onto them. The BNP remained in frequent contact with the Governor and legislative leaders to express concerns with this bill and to suggest improvements that would make it less burdensome without reducing protections for workers.

For what amendments did BNP advocate? Were those amendments included in the final agreement?

  1. Limit the infectious disease standards to declared states of emergency. BNP argued that doing so would protect workers in times of crisis, while reducing the burden on businesses when risk is low. This proposed amendment faced the most resistance and was not included in the final agreement.
  2. Eliminate private right of action. BNP argued that the private right of action would subject employers to significant liability and frivolous lawsuits. This provision was not fully removed in final agreement, but some important chapter amendments will improve it:
    • Employers are no longer liable for liquidated damages
    • Employees are required to notify employers of issues
    • 30-day cure period in which employers can correct violations without penalty
    • 6-month statute of limitations
    • Courts can award employers for costs and attorney fees in frivolous lawsuits
  3. Eliminate workplace safety committees. BNP argued that the bill’s workplace safety committee structure is burdensome and costly, and there are better ways to include employee input. Although the enacted law still mandates these committees, the final agreement includes minor chapter amendments. Employers that already have existing workplace committees are exempt from this provision. The scope of policies the committee can review is much more narrow in the final agreement: the original bill would have allowed the committee to review any policy related to worker’s compensation law, but the agreement limits the committee’s scope to reviewing occupational safety policy.

The full HERO Act text can be found here, and the agreement’s chapter amendments here. As the state releases its standards as required under the Act, BNP will continue to communicate updates and helpful information.

Related Posts

Workforce Policy Update March 2022

By kbieniek@thepartnership.org | March 8, 2022

The BNP works closely with government leaders to keep them informed of employer challenges and to advocate for policy that would ease the workforce crisis. The BNP supports legislation that expands access to education and training, makes quality childcare more accessible, removes barriers to workforce participation, and reforms our immigration system to meet our region’s workforce needs.

What is Carbon Pricing?

By jveronica@thepartnership.org | February 16, 2022

In the New York State Climate Action Council’s Draft Scoping Plan, the Council recommends implementing some form of carbon pricing to help the state combat climate change. So, what is carbon pricing, and how would it impact New York?

2.10.22 COVID Bulletin: BNP Gets Answers on Masking and HERO Act

By jveronica@thepartnership.org | February 10, 2022

Yesterday, Governor Kathy Hochul announced she would repeal the state’s mask mandate, effective today. However, her announcement did not proactively address how the repeal coincided with the NY HERO Act, which would have required employees in most workplaces to continue masking.

2.9.22 COVID-19 Bulletin: Hochul Ends Mask Mandate; Poloncarz Will Follow Suit

By jveronica@thepartnership.org | February 9, 2022

Today, Governor Kathy Hochul announced she will NOT be renewing the state’s mask mandate, so the mandate will expire tomorrow.