paid leave on FMLA
juju
120 Posts
I was just reading the HR Hero "Tip of the Week" about FMLA. It says that if an employee requests leave to care for a healthy new child, they can NOT be required to use sick leave. Currently our policy states an employee must use all available benefit time, although in this situaiton, sick time cannot be used until all other time (vacation, personal, holiday) has been exhausted. If we are in the wrong, I would like to let my boss know. Can anyone point me to the specific reg where it states that? I was on the DOL website and found lots of good info but not specifically what I was looking for.
Thanks!
Thanks!
Comments
29 CFR 825.207 - This section states that an employee can use FAMILY leave to care for a healthy newborn if the employer's policy regarding family leave allows for use for this reason.
It goes on to state that an employee is only allowed to use paid leave if the employer's uniformly applied policy would allow leave for this reason.
Basically it means that an employee cannot use paid leave that would be unavailable to them in absence of the FMLA situation.
Hope this helps.
Yes, she is caring for a newborn, but she is also healing herself.
using sick leave for the first 6-8 weeks and any other available PTO for the remaining time may be a way to make this work for you.
[url]http://www.hrhero.com/headlines/040904/tip-fmla.shtml[/url]
I'm not a lawyer, but as I understand it, you have to apply your sick leave policies consistently for FMLA and non-FMLA conditions. For example, if you don't let employees use sick leave to care for a kid with a cold, then you can't force them to use sick leave for a kid with an FMLA illness.
In the same vein, you probably wouldn't let a male employee to use sick leave to care for his healthy 2-year-old, so you can't require him to use sick leave to care for his healthy 2-week-old.
The regulations are a bit confusing. In 29 CFR 825.207, you have to read (a) and (c) together.
Here are a couple of articles that talk about the caring-for-a-sick-kid scenario:
"Sick leave and the FMLA," Arizona Employment Law Letter, March 2004.
"FMLA: substitution of paid leave clarification," Oklahoma Employment Law Letter, April 2001.
Of course, things are different with PTO.
James Sokolowski
HRhero.com