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In 1993 Congress passed and the President signed into
law the Family and Medical Leave Act. The purpose of
this law is to balance the needs of the workplace with
the needs of families. It allows employees to take reasonable
leave for medical reasons, for the birth or adoption
of a child, for the care of a child, spouse, or a parent
who has a serious health condition.
To be eligible under this law you have to employed
for at least twelve months from the employer you wish
to take the leave. And generally your employer must
have at least 50 employees working for him or her in
order for you to be able to take leave under this law.
If you qualify under this law you are entitled to take
a total of twelve workweeks of leave during any twelve
period for any one of the following:
· the birth of a child and care for your newborn
child; · the placement of a child for adoption
or foster care; · to care for your spouse, your
child or a parent if they have a serious health condition;
or · a serious health condition which prevents
you from performing the functions of your position.
The amount of leave you take under the Family and Medical
Leave Act can be taken intermittently or on a reduced
schedule if your employer and you agree to it. But the
total amount of leave available to you cannot be reduced
to under twelve weeks. If you take intermittent leave
the employer can transfer you, temporary, to another
position provided that the new position has the equivalent
pay and benefits and better provides for your leave.
But if you and your spouse work for the same employer
both of you cannot take twelve weeks of leave each.
You must generally split the twelve weeks between both
of you.
Generally, leave under the Family and Medical Leave
Act is non-paid leave. Your employer can offer some
paid leave, but they are not required to do so. You,
or your employer can require you to, use your accrued
paid vacation time, personal time or medical/sick leave
during your twelve week leave.
If you know that you are going to require leave for
the birth or adoption of a child you must notify your
employer 30 days in advance of the leave, if practicable.
Also you have to make a reasonable effort to schedule
medical treatment (if you are taking leave for a serious
health condition) so it will minimize the disruption
to the employer, if at all practicable. And when you
are on your leave your employer can require you to state
your intentions on whether you intend to return to work.
If you are taking leave for a medical reason, your
employer can require you to have medical certification
issued by a health care provider. If your employer wishes,
at the employer's expense, they can have a second opinion
issued on the medical reasons for your leave. If your
medical certification and your employer's second opinion
differ, your employer may require you, at your employer's
expense, to submit to another opinion from a health
care provider. This third opinion from a health care
provider, chosen by you and your employer together,
is binding on both of you. Your employer can also require
subsequent additional medical certifications on a reasonable
basis.
When you are out on leave under the Family and Medical
Leave Act your employer must maintain your health benefits
under any group health plan for the duration of your
leave. If, however, you fail to return to work after
your leave you may be required to reimburse your employer
for these benefits. You are not required to pay for
these benefits if your failure to return is a result
of circumstances beyond your control or because of the
continuance of a serious medical condition. You do not
however, accrue seniority or other employment benefits
during your leave.
When you return from your leave you must be restored
to your former position or a equivalent position. The
exception to this rule is if you are a highly compensated
employee. If you are a highly compensated employee and
your employer does not wish to reinstate you, your employer
can refuse to do so if reinstatement causes substantial
economic injury to the employer.
If an employer interferes with the rights of the employee
or discriminates against an employee for asserting his
or her rights under this law, an employee can sue the
employer. An employee can recover either money damages
or can require the employee to reinstate the employee.
If the employee requests money damages he or she can
receive money equal to the amount of wages, salary and
benefits lost for violation of this law plus interest
paid on this lost compensation. The employee can also
recover liquidated damages equal to the amount paid
in lost wages, salary and benefits if the court believes
the employer did not violate this law without reasonable
grounds. The employee, if he or she wins her lawsuit,
can also require the employer to pay reasonable attorneys'
fees and costs of the lawsuit.
Courtesy of:
The O'Neill Law Office
Norristown, PA
(610) 635-5555
www.reolaw.com
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