Don’t delay FMLA (leave)!
The best intentions sometimes go awry. This is true for employers that allow employees to use up some or all of their available paid sick or other leave before designating the leave as qualifying under the federal Family and Medical Leave Act (FMLA). Doing so usually gives employees more total time off, but the U.S. Department of Labor (DOL) says that’s not compliant with the law.
For employers that want to delay the designation of FMLA-qualifying leave or provide additional FMLA leave beyond the 12-week FMLA entitlement, the U.S. Department of Labor says, “Don’t do it!”
Employers must designate
Employers may not delay designating FMLA-qualifying leave. Once an employee tells the employer they need to take time off for an FMLA-qualifying reason, neither the employee nor the employer may decline FMLA protection for that leave.
Once employers have enough information to determine whether an absence qualifies for FMLA protections, they must give the employee a written designation notice within five business days. This is true even if an employee uses accrued paid time off concurrent with unpaid FMLA leave. Failure to follow this notice requirement risks a claim that the employer interfered with, restrained, or denied the employee’s FMLA rights.
Employees don’t get to decide whether they can “use” FMLA leave for an absence. That is only up to the employer. It is always the employer’s responsibility to determine if an absence qualifies as FMLA leave and to designate it accordingly. That determination happens once the employer has enough information, often from a certification.
More leave is OK, just don’t call it “FMLA”
It’s OK for employers to give employees more time off beyond 12 weeks of FMLA leave, but they might misunderstand the regulations that say that employers “…must observe any employment benefit or program that provides greater family and medical leave rights to employees than the rights provided by the FMLA.” (825.700)
While nothing prohibits employers from giving more leave to employees, they may not designate more than 12 weeks of FMLA leave (or 26 for military caregiver leave). Employers should not refer to any extra leave as “FMLA leave.”
Leaves run concurrently
Employees may choose to use accrued paid time off with unpaid FMLA leave, applying the two leave types at the same time (concurrently). Employers must not, however, count the paid leave first in lieu of FMLA leave.
When employees use their accrued paid time off, they get some pay during what would otherwise be unpaid leave. Employers may require that employees use their accrued paid time during otherwise unpaid FMLA leave.
Key to remember: Employers may not delay designating an absence as FMLA-qualifying, even if employees would prefer that they do.