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FMLA: Forgetting Minutiae Leads to (legal) Actions (Part III)

June 27, 2019 Family and Medical Leave Act Labor & Employment Blog

After providing a general overview of the convoluted maze that is the FMLA, explaining which employers are subject to the FMLA, and describing which employees are eligible for leave, we now continue our journey by addressing when an employee can take FMLA.

Eligible employees of covered employers may take up to 12 workweeks of leave during any
12-month period for one, or more, of the following reasons:

  1. The birth of the employee’s son or daughter, or to care for the newborn child.
  2. For placement with the employee of a son or daughter for adoption or foster care.
  3. To care for the employee’s spouse, son, daughter, or parent with a serious health
    condition.
  4. Because of a serious health condition that makes the employee unable to perform the functions of the employee’s job.
  5. Because of any qualifying exigency arising out of the fact that the employee’s spouse, son, daughter, or parent is a military member on covered active duty (or has been notified of an impending call or order to covered active duty status).

These reasons—along with a few others involving military service members that we will address in a future blog post—are known as “qualifying reasons” under the FMLA. Some of these qualifying reasons are straightforward while others involve important nuances. For today’s post, we’re going to address the issues that come up with points 1 and 2 above (the birth, adoption, or fostering of children) through another series of questions and answers.

I have an employee who qualifies for FMLA leave, and the employee is about to have a new child. What rights does that employee have?

As noted above, an employee who qualifies for FMLA can take up to 12 workweeks of leave during a 12-month period for the birth or care of a newborn child.

Does an employee have to take all the qualifying leave at one time?

It depends. An eligible employee may use intermittent or reduced schedule leave after the birth of a healthy child or placement of a healthy child for adoption or foster care, but only if the employer agrees. If the employer does not agree, then the time off will be all at one time.

Does an employee need to take all of their FMLA leave for the birth of the child right after the child is born?

Not necessarily, an employee can take leave for the birth of a child any time up to 12 months after the child’s birth.

Are both parents entitled to leave for the birth of their child?

Generally, both parents are entitled to leave for the birth of the employee’s child. However, if both spouses work for the same employer, the total combined leave taken by both spouses for the birth of the child or to care for the child after birth may be limited to a combined total of 12 weeks of leave during any 12-month period. In other words, both spouses have 12 weeks combined for the newborn child. Thus, the mother and father could both take 6 weeks each. Or the mother could take 9 weeks, and the father 3 weeks. Alternatively, if the mother takes 12 weeks, then her spouse would not be entitled to any FMLA leave.

Where both spouses use a portion of the total 12-week FMLA leave entitlement for the birth of a child, each spouse would be entitled to the difference between the amount he or she has taken individually and 12 weeks for FMLA leave for other purposes.

The foregoing is also true for the placement with the employee of a child for adoption or foster care. For purposes of the FMLA, a spouse includes a married husband or wife (husband or wife refers to the other person with whom an individual entered into marriage), which includes same-sex spouses.

As noted above, the first post in our series on FMLA summarized the steps an employer should follow when dealing with the FMLA labyrinth and addressed which employers are covered by the Act. The second post explained which employees are eligible for FMLA leave. The next FMLA post in this series will address the qualifying reasons involving an employee’s own serious health condition or the serious health condition of family members.

Jennifer Fowler-Hermes
jfowler-hermes@williamsparker.com
941-552-2558