Leave for childbirth and recovery can fall under both the PWFA and the FMLA
Pregnant employees will generally need time off for the delivery of their child and the ensuing recovery. Most employers covered by the federal Family and Medical Leave Act (FMLA) know that the time off will be counted as FMLA leave, assuming the employee meets the eligibility criteria.
Employers should also know that time off for delivery and recovery will also fall under the federal Pregnant Workers Fairness Act (PWFA). Leave provided for this reason gives employers two laws’ worth of compliance at once!
PWFA accommodations
Being a discrimination law, the PWFA requires employers to provide a reasonable accommodation to an employee’s limitations related to, affected by, or arising out of:
- Pregnancy,
- Childbirth, or
- Related medical conditions.
Employers are not, however, required to provide an accommodation that will cause an undue hardship to the company.
Undue hardship means significant difficulty or expense that focuses on a particular employer’s resources and circumstances. Undue hardship refers not only to financial difficulty, but also to reasonable accommodations that are unduly extensive, substantial, or disruptive, or those that would fundamentally alter business operations. Employers must assess these matters on a case-by-case basis.
While leave is an accommodation of last resort under the PWFA, time off for delivery and recovery will be required in many situations.
Interaction with the FMLA
Unlike the FMLA, however, the PWFA does not give employees a set amount of leave. Employers would provide as much leave as would not pose an undue hardship. If an employee needs only six weeks off work for recovery, the PWFA would entitle the employee to those six weeks.
The FMLA, however, would entitle the employee to take more leave after recovery to bond with the child.
Therefore, the first six weeks would fall under both the PWFA and the FMLA, and the rest of the 12 weeks would fall under only the FMLA.
Key to remember: Employers meet their obligation under the PWFA and FMLA in regard to time off for delivery and recovery. They still need to provide time off for bonding under the FMLA.

























































