If an employee quits and returns, do they get a new batch of 12 weeks of FMLA leave?
If an employee uses some leave under the federal Family and Medical Leave Act (FMLA), quits, and then returns a couple of months later, their entitlement to FMLA leave does not automatically reset to a full 12 weeks of FMLA leave.
How much FMLA leave a returning employee would have on any given date would depend upon which method the employer uses to calculate the 12-month leave year period.
To illustrate
To help illustrate this situation, let’s say Jo Employee, who had worked for the company for years, took two weeks of FMLA leave last October 2 - 13. She quit in December and was rehired the following March (the grass isn’t always greener…).
The employer would need to see how much FMLA leave Jo took in the current 12-month leave year period. The leave year doesn’t reset because an employee is rehired. So, the 12-month leave year period is important.
Employers get to choose the leave year
Employers may choose from four options on how to measure the 12-month leave year period:
- Calendar year: If the company used the calendar year method to calculate the 12-month leave year period, Jo would have a new batch of 12 weeks of FMLA leave, as a new 12-month leave year period began on January 1.
- Measured forward: If the company used the measured forward method to calculate the 12-month leave year period, Jo would have 10 weeks of FMLA leave available until at the earliest October 2. If she requested leave any time after October 2, 2024, a new 12-month leave year would begin.
- Another static 12-month period: If the company used another static 12-month method to calculate the 12-month leave year period, such as a fiscal year that began September 1, Jo would have 10 weeks of FMLA leave available until September 1.
- Rolling backward: If the company used the rolling backward method to calculate the 12-month leave year period, Jo would have 10 weeks of FMLA leave available when she was rehired in March. If she continued to take FMLA leave in March and beyond, how much FMLA leave she had available on any given date would depend upon when she took the leave and how much she took.
Employers must choose one method and apply it consistently, with few exceptions, such as where a state law prescribes a method for a state leave law. Under Wisconsin law, for example, employers must use the calendar year method. That means that employers must use the calendar year method for both WI law and federal FMLA.
If Jo’s employer used the calendar methos, for example, Jo would have a new batch of 12 weeks of FMLA leave available as a new leave year began on January 1.
Key to remember: Whether rehired employees get a full batch of 12 weeks of FMLA leave will depend upon which method chosen to calculate the 12-month leave year period.