FMLA and state paid leave laws —what employers need to know
Recently, Minnesota joined the paid leave law bandwagon. As this trend continues, and with the possibility of employees working in any state, employers might be interested in knowing which states have paid leave laws, and which states have upcoming paid leave requirements.
State | Paid family leave | Paid medical leave |
---|---|---|
California | X | X |
Colorado (1/1/24) | X | X |
Connecticut | X | X |
Delaware | X | X |
District of Columbia | X | X |
Hawaii | X | X |
Maryland (1/1/25) | X | X |
Massachusetts | X | X |
Minnesota (1/1/26) | X | X |
New Hampshire* | X | X |
New Jersey | X | X |
New York | X | X |
Oregon (9/1/23) | X | X |
Rhode Island | X | X |
Vermont* (7/1/23 for state employees, 7/1/24 for private employees) | X | X |
Washington | X | X |
States in italics mean the leave provisions have not yet begun.
*Voluntary; employers may participate but are not required to.
As the chart illustrates, most leave laws include both medical and family leave. Generally, this is defined as the following:
- Medical leave. Time off for an employee’s own medical condition.
- Family leave. Time off to care for a family member, including time off for parenting — having a child, or expanding the family through adoption or foster care.
When can leave time run concurrently?
Leave under most of the state paid leave laws can run concurrently with leave under the federal Family and Medical Leave Act (FMLA) leave. The employee would need to meet the eligibility criteria for both, and the reason would need to qualify for each.
READ MORE: Overview of the FMLA
State leave laws, however, have lesser employee eligibility criteria, and have more reasons for which employees may take leave. Therefore, more employees could be entitled to only state leave.
Many paid leave laws are funded through employee and/or employer contributions. Often, employers must withhold money from employee pay and submit it to the state agency along with the employer contributions.
Key to remember: Employers with employees in states with paid leave laws will need to be aware of these laws, their particular provisions, and how they interact with federal FMLA leave.