Military leave — What notice do employees have to give employers?
Employees who are also involved in the military have obligations beyond the civilian workplace. These obligations can include providing information to employers about their military service.
The federal Uniformed Services Employment and Reemployment Rights Act (USERRA) governs employee protections about military leave. Employers, for example, need to plan for employee availability and want to know when employees will be out. Therefore, they would prefer that employees let them know in advance of any military leave.
Employees must notify their employers that they intend to take leave to perform service in the uniformed services, with certain exceptions.
No particular form
Employees’ notice to employers may be either verbal or written. The notice may be informal and doesn’t need to follow any particular format.
Employers may not require employees to fill out a standardized leave request form for their military leave. They’re also prohibited from requiring employees to submit it to HR a certain number of days in advance of their military leave.
Employees don’t need to give their employers notice of their military leave when it’s scheduled for a time they’re not working (e.g., weekends). If, however, the uniformed service spans a period that overlaps with scheduled work, then employees must give notice of the military service that requires them to be absent from work.
How far in advance
Although the USERRA doesn’t specify how far in advance employees must give such notice, they should provide notice as far in advance as is reasonable under the circumstances. The Defense Department strongly recommends that employees give advance notice to their civilian employers at least 30 days before leaving for uniformed service when it’s feasible to do so.
Exceptions
Employees must give advance notice of pending military service unless giving such notice is prevented by military necessity, or is otherwise impossible or unreasonable under all circumstances. In those instances:
- Only a designated authority can determine “military necessity,” and such a determination isn’t subject to judicial review. In general, this includes situations where a mission, operation, exercise, or requirement is classified, or could be compromised or otherwise adversely affected by public knowledge. In certain cases, the Secretary of Homeland Security, in consultation with the Secretary of Defense, can decide that giving notice by intermittent disaster-response appointees of the National Disaster Medical System is precluded by “military necessity.”
- It may be impossible or unreasonable to give advance notice under certain circumstances. Such circumstances may include the unavailability of the employees’ employers or a requirement that the employees report for uniformed service in an extremely short time.
Other rules
Employees don’t have to ask for or get their employers’ permission to take military leave. Employees must only give their employers notice of pending service.
If employees tell their employers that they aren’t planning on coming back to work while they’re on military leave, employers may not terminate them.
Employees don’t waive the right to reemployment by telling their employers that they don’t intend to come back to work following the service. Service members are entitled to exercise their reemployment rights throughout the period in which they may report to work or apply for reemployment has passed.
Key to remember: Employers can expect employees to give them notice of military leave, but not in all cases.