My home is a workplace: Domestic workers need health and safety protections


My home is a workplace: Domestic workers need health and safety protections

In summary

Work that happens inside the home deserves to be valued the same as any other job and ought to have the same protections.

By Lily Tomlin, Special to CalMatters

Lily Tomlin is an actor, comedian and producer who lives in Los Angeles with her partner, writer Jane Wagner, [email protected].

President Joe Biden made history recently when he called on Congress to invest in a care economy by raising wages and benefits for home care workers. Here in California, we have the opportunity to advance that vision by following the lead of care workers who are imagining a better future and demanding the right to basic health and safety protections.

My partner Jane Wagner and I employ two housekeepers, who have worked with us for more than 20 years. They are immigrants from Central America who came to the United States to make a better life for themselves and their families. They are conscientious and caring, and play an essential role in managing our household. Yet despite their tremendous contribution, they, along with 300,000 other domestic workers in California, have been excluded from our state’s health and safety labor laws.

I grew up in a blue collar household in Detroit, in a predominantly Black neighborhood. My father was a factory worker and my mother a nurse’s aide. I was aware of how many good working people were bossed around and mistreated.  


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