The DOL continues to look at paid leave
On June 26, 2024, the U.S. Department of Labor (DOL) held a conference to discuss the latest research on paid family and medical leave and its equitable implementation. The current federal Family and Medical Leave Act (FMLA) provides for only unpaid leave.
During the conference, former Secretary of Labor and current White House Senior Advisor Tom Perez highlighted the current administration’s commitment to paid family and medical leave.
In his 2025 budget proposal, the President announced his plan to establish a national paid family and medical leave program. Administered by the Social Security Administration, the program would provide eligible employees up to 12 weeks of leave to:
- Care for and bond with a new child;
- Care for a seriously ill loved one;
- Heal from their own serious illness;
- Address circumstances arising from a loved one’s military deployment; or
- Find safety from domestic violence, sexual assault, or stalking.
In early 2024, the DOL put together legislative framework on paid leave that included the creation of an “Interstate Paid Leave Action Network (I-PLAN)” that would push for improvements in coordination and harmonization of paid leave benefits across the growing number of states with their own paid leave programs – and do so in a way that works for states, employers, and employees.
Part of the plan would create equivalency standards so that multi-state employers could design paid uniform, nationwide leave programs that would satisfy the elements of each state’s employer-based plan requirements.
State paid leave laws
A March 2023 DOL Bureau of Labor Statistics survey on employer-provided benefits found that 27 percent of private sector workers in the U.S. had access to paid family leave and 43 percent had access to short-term disability insurance.
Because of the absence of a federal paid family and medical leave program, 14 states and the District of Columbia have enacted paid leave programs that provide workers with paid leave to care for themselves or a loved one. All these state leave laws pose challenges for employers that have multi-state locations or employees. State leave laws are designed independently and, therefore, have varying requirements. Employers must be familiar with the requirements of each law to ensure they avoid violations.
The conference signals continued interest in national paid leave. So far, however, the administration’s proposal has not made much progress, so employers will likely not see a nation-wide paid leave law soon. A federal law could help make administering leave easy — particularly if it includes a provision that federal law preempts state law, similar to ERISA.
Key to remember: The DOL is trying to take steps to bring attention to the fact that, until the federal government enacts a paid leave law, states will continue to enact their own paid leave laws, increasing leave administrative challenges for employers with multi-state locations and/or employees.