The FFCRA might be reinstated and expanded
In a January 14th speech, President-Elect Joe Biden indicated that, as part of his recovery plan, he will ask Congress to put the Families First Coronavirus Response Act’s (FFCRA) requirement to provide paid leave for qualifying reasons back in place — with some changes.
The plan would eliminate exemptions for employers with more than 500 and less than 50 employees, making the requirement applicable to all employers. He will also make it clear that healthcare workers and first responders get these benefits, too, as employers were allowed to exempt them in the original version of the law.
Those are not the only expansions involved. Others include the following:
- Increase the amount of leave to over 14 weeks of paid sick and family and medical leave for the following reasons:
- To help parents with additional caregiving responsibilities when a child or loved one’s school or care center is closed,
- For people who have or are caring for people with COVID-19 symptoms,
- For people who are quarantining due to exposure, and
- For people who need to take time off to get the vaccine.
- Provide a maximum paid leave benefit of $1,400 per-week for eligible workers (the original provided a maximum of $511 per day - $2,555 per week, or $5,110 total over the entire paid sick leave period).
- Only employers with fewer than 500 employees would be reimbursed for the cost of the leave.
- The provisions would expire September 30, 2021.
One of the arguments supporting this action is that the original FFCRA decreased daily infections of the COVID-19 by 400 cases per state per day in states that previously had no paid sick leave requirement.
The announcement did not provide any details such as whether such a provision would be retroactive.
Some employers have voluntarily continued to provide the FFCRA paid leave in part to help keep the workplace safe, and also in case the law was reinstated and made retroactive.
Stay tuned — we’ll be keeping an eye on this development.