Did you know? Part-time employees may take FMLA leave
Private employers with 50 or more employees in the U.S. and all public employers must provide leave under the federal Family and Medical Leave Act (FMLA) to employees who meet certain eligibility criteria.
Those employees, however, don’t need to work full-time schedules to qualify for FMLA.
Whether an employee is part-time, full-time, seasonal, and so on does not affect their FMLA eligibility.
Employee eligibility
To be eligible to take FMLA leave, employees must meet all three of the following criteria:
- Work for the company for at least 12 months (need not be continuous),
- Worked at least 1,250 hours in the 12 months before leave is to begin, and
- Work at a location with at least 50 company employees within 75 miles.
Employees who work a little more than 26 hours per week will meet the 1,250 hours worked threshold. Therefore, simply indicating that part-time employees are not eligible for FMLA leave would risk a violation of the law.
Seasonal employees, for example, who work about 52 hours per week for six months will also meet the 1,250 hours worked threshold.
Some part-time or seasonal employees will not meet all the eligibility criteria because of their limited months or hours worked. In that case, they would not be eligible to take FMLA leave.
How much FMLA leave
Part-time employees may take 12 of their workweeks of FMLA leave in a 12-month leave year period. The hourly equivalent of those 12 workweeks depends on what an employee’s schedule looks like.
An employee works 30 hours per week will have 360 hours of FMLA leave. In contrast, an employee who normally works 50 hours per week will have 600 hours of FMLA leave. The number of hours in an employee’s FMLA leave “bucket” only really comes into play for intermittent leave. Otherwise, a workweek is a workweek regardless of how many hours an employee typically works.
If an employee who works 30 hours per week begins five weeks of leave on Monday, September 11, he would return to his 30-hours per week schedule on Monday, October 16.
Tracking intermittent leave
When employees take leave intermittently or on a reduced schedule, tracking the leave can be more challenging.
To determine how many hours of FMLA leave the employee as available, employers simply multiply the number of hours an employee works in a workweek by 12.
Many part-time employees work variable hours each week. Sometimes an employee’s schedule varies so much that an employer can’t determine how many hours the employee would have worked before taking FMLA leave.
In that situation, the employer should use a weekly average of the hours worked over the 12 months before leave begins to calculate how many hours of FMLA leave the employee has available.
Key to remember: Part-time employees can be eligible to take 12 weeks of FMLA leave, but they need to meet certain criteria. How many hours intermittent or reduced schedule FMLA leave employees may take depends upon how many hours they work per week.