Now the Emergency Family and Medical Leave Expansion Act
(FEMLEA) requires certain
employers to expand upon the Family and Medical Leave Act (FMLA) for some
employees so that they may take paid time off work.
WHO IS INCLUDED
· Private sector employers with fewer than 500
employees
· Government employers with 1 or more employees
· The Department of Labor may exempt small
business with fewer than 50 employees when the viability of the business is
threatened; the Department will issue regulations on this exemption
· Employees who have been employed at the business
for at least 30 calendar days
· Employers may choose to exclude emergency first
responders and health care providers
HOW EMPLOYEES QUALIFY
· If an employee needs to care for a family member
under quarantine/isolation
· If an employee needs to care for a minor child
whose school or childcare is unavailable as a result of the COVID-19 pandemic
· If the employee is diagnosed with coronavirus
· An employee DOES NOT qualify if they are
quarantined because they were exposed to coronavirus but are not sick with the
virus
SPECIFICS FOR
QUALIFYING EMPLOYEES
· Employees will not be paid for the first 10 work
days, unless the employee uses vacation, personal, or sick leave, which is not
required
· After 10 days, the employee is paid 2/3 of
regular pay for the remainder of leave, with a cap of $200/day and $10,000 in
total for the leave period, which can be up to 12 weeks
· The 12-week leave period is reduced if the
employee took an FMLA leave within the same administrative year
· The FMLA’s job protection and anti-retaliation
apply to EFMLEA, except for employers with fewer than 25 employees and when the
employee’s job no longer exits due to the circumstances following the public
health emergency
EMERGENCY PAID SICK LEAVE
ACT
The Emergency Paid
Sick Leave Act requires that employers provide all full-time employees with up
to 80 hours of paid sick leave and pro-rated hours of paid sick leave for
part-time employees.
WHO IS INCLUDED
· Private sector employers with fewer than 500
employees
· Government employers with 1 or more employees
· The Department of Labor may exempt small
businesses with fewer than 50 employees when the viability of the business is
threatened; the Department will issue regulations on this exemption
· NO minimum term of employment
· Employers may choose to exclude emergency first
responders and health care providers
HOW EMPLOYEES QUALIFY
· Employee is subject to mandated quarantine or
isolation
· Employee has been advised by a health care
provider to quarantine
· Employee is experiencing symptoms of coronavirus
and seeks medical attention
· Employee is caring for a minor child whose
school or childcare is unavailable
· Employee is experiencing a similar condition as
identified by the Secretary of Health and Human Services
SPECIFICS FOR
QUALIFYING EMPLOYEES
· Full-time employees are eligible for 80 hours
· Part-time employees are eligible for hours based
upon the amount of time that they regularly work over a two-week period
· For employees seeking pay due to mandated or
health-care-provider suggested quarantine, or for those seeking medical
attention due to COVID-19 symptoms, pay is equal to 100% of their hourly rate,
if that pay is more than minimum wage, and capped at $511/day and $5,110 in
total for the leave period
· For all other reasons, pay is equal to 2/3 of
regular pay, if that pay is more than minimum wage, with a cap of $200/day and
$2,000 in total for the leave period
· Employees must give notice to employers before
using Emergency Paid Sick Leave
· Employers can’t ask that employees use other
paid leave before using Emergency Paid Sick Leave
· Employers must post notice to employees about
their right to use Emergency Paid Sick Leave; the Secretary of Labor will draft
a model notice that employers can use
TAX CREDITS
Employers can seek tax
credits related to Emergency Paid Sick Leave and Emergency Paid Family and
Medical Leave.
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