May employers give more than 12 weeks of FMLA leave?
When written, the federal Family and Medical Leave Act (FMLA) strived to strike a balance between employee and employer needs. The 12 weeks of FMLA leave to which an eligible employee is entitled was the result of a compromise between groups with marked but differing interest in how much FMLA leave employees should get.
While employers may give employees as much time off work as they like, they may not designate more than 12 weeks of leave as FMLA-protected in a 12-month leave year period.
Even if employees use company-provided accrued paid leave to help replace lost income while off work for an FMLA-qualifying event, employers also count that leave as FMLA leave.
Of course, employers must also follow any employment benefit program (e.g., state leave) or other plan that provides greater family or medical leave rights to employees than the rights under the FMLA. But giving such additional leave outside of the FMLA may not expand the employee’s 12 weeks of FMLA leave.
Don’t call the extra leave “FMLA”
Employers may certainly have company leave policies that give employees more than the 12 weeks of FMLA leave. If an employee uses all 12 weeks of FMLA leave and still needs more, the employer policy might apply to the extra paid or unpaid leave.
That extra leave should not, however, be designated or called “FMLA” leave. Referring to it as FMLA leave could not only be confusing, but if employees were to act on such a representation to their own detriment, employers could be on the hook for complying with the law’s terms or face an FMLA interference claim.
To illustrate
Let’s say that ABC Company had a supplemental leave policy that allowed up to 8 weeks of job-protected, unpaid paid leave for qualifying reasons in addition to FMLA leave.
Jo Employee needed 16 weeks off to care for a parent. She used all 12 weeks of FMLA leave. After that, the additional 4 weeks fell under the company supplemental leave.
Thus, Jo still had 4 weeks of company leave available.
April, the company leave administrator, knew the company policy would apply to the additional 4 weeks of leave. April referred to the additional leave only as supplemental leave, after closing out the FMLA leave, since that was exhausted.
Under the terms of the supplemental policy, April also knew that Jo would need to have met any eligibility criteria for the company leave, the reason had to be a qualifying one, and the company needed to communicate to Jo about all this, including what Jo’s responsibilities were during the additional leave. This is all similar to the FMLA but applying only to the supplemental leave.
That way, Jo, April, and the company keep the additional supplemental leave — that beyond 12 weeks of FMLA leave – distinct. Neither the policy, nor the company, gave more than 12 weeks of FMLA leave.
Key to remember: While employers may give employees more than 12 weeks of leave, they may not give employees more than 12 weeks of FMLA leave.