Amid all the state leave laws, don’t forget about the FMLA
When a state enacts a new employee leave law, it generally makes headlines. Currently, the U.S. has at least 40 states with leave laws (paid or unpaid) that have been complicating leave administration for employers.
The tide of state laws continues to roll, with about five states poised to enact leave-related laws. All this state hoopla can appear to hide the federal Family and Medical Leave Act (FMLA) in the shadows.
Just because employers have to deal with state leave laws, however, doesn’t mean they can ignore their obligations under the FMLA.
Employers might think that, as long as they comply with their requirements under the various state leave laws, they don’t have to comply with the FMLA. Employers might think the state law is more important or even redundant with the FMLA. But employers must comply with each law as it applies.
Concurrency
Many of the state laws allow the time off to run concurrently with FMLA leave, when:
- The employer is covered by both,
- The employee meets the eligibility criteria for both, and
- The reason qualifies for both.
When the leave runs concurrently, employers have to comply with both laws. A state law could have specific employer requirements, and employers have to meet them. That could involve giving employees certain information. The Colorado Family and Medical Leave Insurance (FAMLI), for example, requires employers to not only post the program notice in a prominent location, but it also requires employers to give employees written notice of the program upon hiring and when learning of an employee experiencing an event that triggers the employee’s eligibility.
Under the FMLA, when employees put the employer on notice of the need for leave, employers must give the employee an eligibility/rights & responsibilities notice within five business days. Once employers have enough information to determine if the absence qualifies for FMLA protections (such as from a certification), employers have five business days to give the employee a designation notice.
Employers can't overlook those FMLA steps, even if they seem redundant with state requirements.
Risks
If employers fail to designate an absence as FMLA leave, they may retroactively designate it only if doing so doesn’t cause harm or injury to the employee. If so, employers can’t retroactively designate it, which could result in the employee having more than the 12 weeks of FMLA leave.
Employers that don’t comply with the FMLA’s notice requirements can risk fines and penalties, even if the employers gave the employee the 12 workweeks of leave and the employee suffered no actual harm.
Therefore, overlooking the FMLA would not only risk violations but would also add another layer of unnecessary complexity.
Key to remember: Employers need to remember to comply with the federal FMLA’s requirements in addition to a state’s requirements.

























































