Navigating the storm: Snow days and FMLA
It’s winter in the northern hemisphere, with snow and cold in many parts of the U.S. Bad weather can cause employers to close operations for a day or longer. If employers have employees on leave under the federal Family and Medical Leave Act (FMLA), they need to know how to track leave when business is closed due to weather.
Continuous FMLA leave
When an employee is taking FMLA leave in full workweeks (i.e., continuously), and the company shuts down for a day or two, employers would treat the leave time like a holiday.
When holidays (or snow days) occur, a full week taken as FMLA leave is still counted as a full week of FMLA leave. Therefore, a snow day would still be counted as FMLA leave. Easy peasy.
If, for example, Jo Employee is taking five weeks of bonding leave and a blizzard causes the company to shut down for a day, employers would count that snow day as FMLA leave.
Intermittent or reduced schedule FMLA leave
When employees are on FMLA leave intermittently or on a reduced schedule, tracking the leave is trickier.
When an employee is taking FMLA leave in increments of less than a week (i.e., intermittently or on a reduced schedule), the snow day(s) are not counted as FMLA leave unless the employee was otherwise scheduled and expected to work during the snow day(s).
If, for example, Jo Employee is taking intermittent FMLA leave to bond with a child, and Jo is scheduled to work on Wednesday, but a blizzard causes the company to shut down that Wednesday, employers would count that day as FMLA leave.
Long closures
If a snowstorm causes a business to temporarily close for a longer period of time and employees generally are not expected to report to work for one or more weeks, employers do not count the days their activities have ceased as FMLA leave.
If, for example, Jo Employee is taking FMLA leave (in full weeks or not), and was schedule to work during the week. A major storm causes the company to close down for an entire week. The employer would not count any of those days as FMLA leave, even if Jo did not work that week, despite being scheduled to do so.
Remote work
If employees are working, regardless of where they are working (e.g., remote work), the time spent working is not FMLA leave.
If, for example, a storm causes an employer to shut down their facility for a day, but Jo employee, who is on intermittent bonding leave, works from home that day, the employer may not count that day as FMLA leave.
Key to remember: When the weather outside gets frightful, employers need to know how to track employees’ FMLA leave appropriately.