Employees can end up with more than 12 weeks of leave for bonding
One of the qualifying reasons eligible employees may take leave under the federal Family and Medical Leave Act (FMLA) is to bond with a healthy child. The child might be from birth, adoption, or foster care.
Employees may take that bonding leave during the 12 months from the date of the birth, adoption, or foster placement. Employees need not begin taking the leave right away. Joe Employee might, for example, begin taking bonding leave six months after his child is born.
12-month leave year
Eligible employees are entitled to 12 workweeks of FMLA leave during a 12-month leave year period. Employers are to choose which method to use to calculate the 12-month leave year period. They may choose from the following options:
- The calendar year;
- Any fixed 12-month leave year, such as a fiscal year, a year required by state law, or a year starting on an employee’s anniversary date;
- The 12-month period measured forward from the date any employee’s first FMLA leave begins; or,
- A “rolling” 12-month period measured backward from the date an employee uses any FMLA leave
12 weeks within 12 months
Eligible employees are entitled to 12 workweeks of leave during each new FMLA leave year. As a result, depending on the leave year chosen, an employee may be entitled to more than 12 weeks of leave for bonding with their child during consecutive FMLA 12-month leave year periods.
For example
As Rebekah’s employer, you use the company’s fiscal year as the FMLA 12-month period, so it runs from July 1 through June 30.
Rebekah had a baby on April 29th and used FMLA leave for eight weeks to recover, and another two weeks to bond with her baby, taking the leave through June 30th.
During the next 12-month leave year that begins July 1st, Rebekah remains on FMLA bonding leave for another eight workweeks and reaches an agreement with you to take another four workweeks’ worth of reduced schedule leave for bonding with her child before her child’s first birthday.
In this example, Rebekah had 22 weeks of FMLA leave, but 10 of those weeks were in one 12-month leave year period, and the remaining 12 were in the subsequent 12-month leave year period.
Key to remember: Employee’s FMLA leave for bonding with a healthy child might span multiple 12-month leave year periods, depending upon which method employers use to calculate that 12-month period. This could result in an employee having more than 12 weeks of FMLA leave available for bonding.