Imagine the following employee situation. MakeStuff Corporation is a Midwest manufacturer of widgets. MakeStuff employs 75 full-time workers, and you are the company’s Plant Manager. Carl, one of your top performers, walks into your office. Typically, he greets you with a smile and a corny joke. Not today. Carl enters with a confused and concerned look on his face. Carl says, “Sue. I’m scared. I just found out that my daughter is sick, and I do not know if it is COVID-19. I don’t know what to think anymore with all the confusion seen on the news. I think I need to take some time off.” What do you do? What laws apply? Family Medical Leave Act? Emergency Family and Medical Leave Expansion? Emergency Paid Sick Leave? What is the proper course of action? It is possible to understand various employment leave laws and build processes to address them. However, it is more difficult to manage specific situations when they arise. Hopefully, the following scenarios will help you address related employee issues.
Three primary leave laws come into play when considering COVID-19 (see Part 4 of this series to better understand the Families First Coronavirus Response Act). It is important to remember these basic facts for each of these laws.
1. Family Medical Leave (FMLA)3. Families First Coronavirus Response Act—Emergency Paid Sick Leave (FFCRA E-PSL)
Scenario #1: Employee is scared that s/he may contract COVID-19, but s/he does not have any signs of illness
Scenario #2: Employee has symptoms of and/or is ill with COVID-19
Scenario #3: Employee is caring for a family member diagnosed with COVID-19
Scenario #4: Schools or daycares are closed or unavailable due to COVID-19, and the employee cannot work because of the need to care for a child
Scenario #5: Employer must shut down operations due to a governmental order
Scenario #6: Employer shuts down or reduces available hours due to a slowdown or lack of demand
Scenario #7: Employer has available work or telework for an employee, but s/he does not want to do it.
As you can see, so many scenarios can surface. It is important to understand these laws (who they apply to, who qualifies for them, what they offer), so that they are properly administered.
Back to Carl…in his situation, it is possible that he qualifies for FMLA and E-PSL. If his daughter’s illness meets the FMLA’s definition of a “serious health condition,” he would be able to obtain 12 weeks of unpaid leave under the Family Medical Leave Act. In addition, if her illness is related to COVID-19, Carl would qualify for two weeks of Emergency Paid Sick Leave. He would not qualify for Emergency Family Leave as there is nothing indicating that his daughter’s school, daycare, or childcare provider is unable to care for her. If that were the case, he would qualify for E-FMLA. Remember, this example states that the employer has at least 50 employees (to qualify for FMLA) and has less than 500 employees (to qualify for E-FMLA and/or E-PSL).
Wow! Do you see how complex this can get?! Feel free to reach out to me if you need helping to think through whether your employee situations qualify for any of the above laws.
This series explores HR-related areas needing consideration as leaders deal with the current COVID-19 disruption. Check out parts 1-5:
HR Issues Amidst COVID-19 Disruptions PART 2: Support Your Employees With Clear Communications
HR Issues Amidst COVID-19 Disruptions PART 3: Staffing and Business Continuity
Hang in there! This will pass! We are in this together!
Need assistance with addressing short and long term HR needs for your business? Contact me at steve.black@brixeyandmeyer.com, and we will address them proactively.
Disclaimer: This blog is not legal advice, but merely informed opinion or general information meant for no particular purpose. Issues addressed in this blog often implicate federal, state, and local labor and employment laws. This blog is not intended as a substitute for legal advice. Readers should consult labor and employment counsel to determine whether their particular policies, procedures, decisions, or courses of action comply with such laws.