Do days when a company is closed for inclement weather count as FMLA leave?
The U.S. Department of Labor’s Wage and Hour Division (WHD) published an opinion letter in January on how an employer’s closure for inclement weather affects an employee on leave under the federal Family and Medical Leave Act (FMLA). The letter was in response to an employer’s question on this issue.
The situation
An employer wondered how to calculate an employee’s FMLA leave use when the employer closed its business for less than a full week due to inclement weather. The FMLA regulations address similar situations involving holidays or when an employer closes for a full week (or more) for reasons such as inventory. But the regulations don’t specifically say what to do when employers close for less than a full week.
The leave type rules the day
The WHD turned to the regulations regarding holidays and other closures. Whether a snow day counts as FMLA leave depends on whether the employee is taking the leave in full or partial weeks.
If an employee is taking FMLA leave in less than full-week increments (intermittently or on a reduced schedule), and that employee isn’t expected to work during the time the employer is closed, the employer wouldn’t count the time the business is closed as FMLA leave.
For example, if Joe Employee takes intermittent FMLA leave on Thursday afternoon and a snowstorm causes the employer to close that day, the employer wouldn’t count Thursday afternoon as FMLA for Joe.
If, on the other hand, Joe Employee was taking FMLA in full weeks, if the employer closed for a day or two due to a snowstorm, it doesn’t matter. The employer would still count the entire week as FMLA leave.
Whether a closure is planned or unplanned has no impact on how much FMLA leave an employee uses. Nor does whether the employee makes up the time lost while an employer is closed because of inclement weather.
Key to remember: Whether an employer’s closure for inclement weather counts as FMLA leave depends on whether the employee takes leave in full or partial weeks.












































