Potential increase in USERRA leave
Under the new administration, increased border protection and National Guard involvement could mean more employees asking for military leave under the federal Uniformed Services Employment and Reemployment Rights Act (USERRA). Employers should be prepared.
Employers unfamiliar with the USERRA might not know that its benefits and protections apply to employees serving under federal military orders as well as Federal Emergency Management Agency (FEMA) reservists and National Guard members. FEMA reservists became eligible for USERRA protections under the Civilian Reservist Emergency Workforce Act of 2021 (the CREW Act), which President Biden signed into law on September 29, 2022.
Under the CREW Act, when FEMA reservists respond to a presidentially declared disaster, they have the same USERRA protections as other military members, including protection from employers firing them because they need to take leave. These protections also extend to the training FEMA reservists take to prepare for their deployment.
Beyond the CREW Act, the Johnny Isakson and David P. Roe, M.D. Veterans Health Care and Benefits Improvement Act of 2020 extended USERRA protections to National Guard members who perform state active duty, including responses to natural disasters. Before that, USERRA excluded call-ups by state governors.
Given all this, employers could see an uptick in the number of employees asking for time off to serve.
New resource for employers
The Department of Defense (DoD) published an instruction, effective November 15, 2024, that can help employers verify military leave. The instruction, which does not apply to non-DoD uniformed services, requires the Reserve Components of the Military Departments and the US Coast Guard to designate an “office of responsibility” to answer employers’ questions related to the timing, frequency, and duration of employee military duty. Offices of responsibility may send documentation to employers to verify dates and length of service and whether the military service is exempt from USERRA’s five years of cumulative military leave.
Employers cannot, however, rely on the instruction for all USERRA-related issues. It exempts several categories of military personnel including FEMA reservists. The military also still has the discretion to delay, defer, cancel, or reschedule military service.
USERRA basics
The USERRA covers all employers. Employees don’t have to give employers documentation before taking leave, but many do. If the leave lasts 31 days or more, employers may require employees to provide documentation to show that:
- Their application for reemployment is timely;
- They have not exceeded the five-year service limitation; and
- Their separation from the military service wasn’t for a disqualifying reason.
After leave, employees have the right to return to the position they would have had if they hadn’t taken the leave.
Key to remember: Employers could see an increase in employee military leave requests, and should be prepared.