How holidays affect FMLA leave
‘Tis the season for Ho Ho Ho and maybe, the HOliday’s impact on leave administration. This could be true for any holiday, depending on how many employees take time off. Employers might also wonder whether they have to issue holiday pay to employees on leave under the federal Family and Medical Leave Act (FMLA). The answers will depend upon some specifics.
Counting the days
To determine how much FMLA leave an employee uses when holidays are involved, employers must look at whether employees are taking the leave in full weeks or not. If an employee is taking leave for one or more full weeks, the fact that a holiday occurs within the week of FMLA leave has no effect; the employer counts the whole week as FMLA leave.
When an employee is using FMLA leave in increments of less than one week, such as intermittent leave or working a reduced schedule, the employer doesn’t count the holiday as FMLA leave unless the employee was scheduled to work during the holiday, but didn’t because of an FMLA-qualifying reason.
If, for example, Jo Employee will be on FMLA leave for the last three weeks of December, and Jo’s employer gives employees time off on Christmas Day as a holiday, the employer would count the week of Christmas as a whole week of FMLA leave for Jo.
If, on the other hand, Jo took FMLA leave the Monday and Tuesday before Christmas Day, worked Wednesday, wasn’t scheduled to work Thursday because of the holiday, then worked Friday of that week, the employer would count only Monday and Tuesday as FMLA leave. If Jo also needed Friday off that week for an FMLA-qualifying reason and was scheduled to work on that day, the employer would also count Friday as FMLA leave.
Holiday pay
When it comes to holiday pay and FMLA leave, employers must apply their company policies. The FMLA doesn’t govern holiday pay. An employee’s entitlement to benefits other than group health care plan coverage is determined by the employer’s established policy for providing pay when the employee is on other forms of leave, paid or unpaid, as appropriate.
Employers might, for example, have a policy that requires employees to be at work the day before and after a holiday to receive holiday pay. The policy could have exceptions, such as when an employee is on paid time off on either of those days. In those situations, if an employee is using paid time off (like sick pay) while on FMLA leave for either of those days, they would be entitled to receive the holiday pay.
If a policy indicates that employees on unpaid leave the day before and/or after a holiday aren’t eligible to receive holiday pay, and an employee is on unpaid FMLA leave for either or both of those days, the employee wouldn’t be eligible to receive the holiday pay, per the policy.
Key to remember: Whether employers can count time off around a holiday as FMLA leave, or whether an employee will be entitled to holiday pay, will depend upon some specific facts, such as whether employees take leave in full weeks and what company policies indicate.















































