|
HR MATTERS E-TIPS
THIS WEEK'S E-TIP: Pregnancy Leave When Not Covered by FMLA (Q&A)
September 5, 2007, Volume 9, No. 36
Published by Personnel Policy Service, Inc.
"Your Policy and Compliance Experts Since 1972"
^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
THIS WEEK'S E-TIP: Pregnancy Leave When Not Covered by FMLA (Q&A)
Do you know what your obligations are to a pregnant employee who is
not covered by the FMLA? Find out what steps you should take to
prevent pregnancy discrimination. |
|
|
|
^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ Recommended Audio Conference
^^^^^^^^^^^^^ |
|
HR's
Role as Catalyst:
Jump-Starting Innovation in the Workplace
Presented by M. Lee Smith Publishers LLC
Wednesday, September 12
11:00 a.m. to 12:30 p.m. Eastern
Does upper management still view HR as just another way to spend
revenue? It's time to show the C-Suite your department's role as a key
profit driver.
In just 90 minutes, you'll learn:
-
How HR can use innovation to
overcome perceptions as a
"cost center."
-
How to apply innovation to
human capital management
practices
-
Practical strategies for
jump starting tangible innovation in
the workplace
-
The barriers to innovation –
and how to overcome them
Click
here to learn more, register, or buy the CD if you can’t attend.
Or, call (800) 274-6774 and mention Conference Code PPSZ.
|
|
|
|
= = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = =
= = = = = = = |
|
|
THIS WEEK'S E-TIP: Pregnancy Leave When Not Covered by FMLA
(Q&A)
Q: If an employee needs leave for pregnancy-related
issues, do we
have to reinstate her after the leave? Do we have to provide a
certain
number of weeks of leave? We have 45 employees and are not
covered
by the FMLA.
A: If your organization is not covered by the Family and
Medical
Leave Act (FMLA) or if an employee is not eligible for FMLA
leave, then
you still must comply with the
Pregnancy Discrimination Act (PDA),
any internal policies, and any state laws requiring pregnancy
leaves of
absence.
(The FMLA generally applies to employers with 50 or more
employees
and all public agencies and schools, and provides leave and
reinstatement rights for various family and medical reasons,
including
pregnancy. (Click
to download a free FMLA Checklist.)
An eligible employee is one who: (1) has worked for the employer
for at
least 12 months (not necessarily consecutively); (2) has worked
for the
employer for at least 1,250 hours in the previous 12 months; and
(3) works
at or is assigned to a worksite that has 50 or more employees or
which is
within 75 miles of employer worksites that taken together have a
total
of 50 or more employees.)
The PDA, found at 42 U.S.C. §2000e(k), amended Title VII of the
Civil
Rights Act to prohibit discrimination based on pregnancy. It
applies to
employers with 15 or more employees and requires employers to
treat
women affected by pregnancy, childbirth, or related medical
conditions
the same as employees who are on leave for other temporary
medical
disabilities. Thus, because the PDA is an antidiscrimination law
rather
than a law mandating leave, it does not require covered
employers to
grant pregnancy leaves. Instead, it only entitles pregnant
employees to
the same leave and benefits granted to nonpregnant employees
with
other temporary medical disabilities.
So, if your organization regularly grants leaves for other
temporary
medical disabilities and guarantees reinstatement, then you
should treat
pregnant employees in the same manner. As explained in the Equal
Employment Opportunity Commission (EEOC) guidelines interpreting
the
PDA, found in 29 C.F.R. §1604.10(b), any policies relating to
the
commencement and duration of leave, the availability of leave
extensions, the accrual during leave of seniority and other
accrued
benefits and privileges, insurance coverage, and reinstatement
after
leave must apply equally to pregnancy and other disabilities.
Although you may not treat pregnant employees differently if the
differences affect them adversely compared to others with
temporary
medical conditions, you may be able to treat them more
favorably. In the
Supreme Court's ruling in California Fed. Sav. & Loan Ass'n v.
Guerra,
479 U.S. 272 (1987), the Court upheld a California statute
requiring
employers to provide female employees an unpaid leave for
pregnancy
disability and to reinstate those employees when they are able
to return
to work unless the job is no longer available. The Court held
that a state
could mandate the provision of a benefit to pregnant employees
that is
not granted to other disabled employees. This decision appears
to allow
employers to give pregnant employees greater leave flexibility
than is
given to other temporarily disabled employees.
You also should check state law for any additional pregnancy
leave
obligations. Some states have laws guaranteeing pregnant
employees
leaves and reinstatement rights. For example, the California
statute,
discussed above and validated by the Supreme Court, requires
employers with five or more employees to provide female
employees
with up to four months of leave in connection with a period of
disability
resulting from pregnancy, childbirth, or related medical
conditions. |
|
|
|
^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ From Your HR Matters E-Tips Editors
^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ |
|
Personnel Policy Manual Service
Policy Writing – HR Best
Practices – Legal Compliance Support
The most comprehensive HR policy documentation and support system
available anywhere
Click
here to learn more or try the Personnel Policy Manual Service
See
what others
say about the Service ... |

Request
a 30-Day free trial now |
|
^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ |
|
|
Subscribers to the
Personnel Policy Manual and HR Policy Answers on
can find more information about pregnancy leave requirements in
Leaves of Absence, Chapter 703, note 28.
Not a subscriber? If you would like to order one of our policy
chapters,
go to:
http://www.hrpolicyanswers.com.
If you have any questions, please call us at 1-800-437-3735. We'll
be
happy to help you. |
|
|
|
^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ HR Policy & Compliance Resources ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ |
|
|
|
Buy and download individual HR Policies for immediate
use in your
organization. Get complete policy development kits: Model Policy
language, Management Rationale background information, and
References for Legal Counsel documentation.
|
YOU CAN TRUST PPS
Information provided in HR Matters E-Tips is researched and reviewed
by the HR experts at Personnel Policy Service as well as employment
law attorneys. However, it is not intended as legal advice. Readers are
encouraged to seek appropriate legal or other professional advice.
^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
Interested in using an article from HR Matters E-Tips on your Web site or
in a newsletter?
Please contact Robin Thomas, Managing Editor of Personnel Policy
Service, Inc., to request permission. You can contact her by email at
editor@ppspublishers.com or by
telephone at 1-800-437-3735.
Please note that the information in every issue of HR Matters E-Tips is
the original, copyrighted work of Personnel Policy Service, Inc., and is
protected under U.S. copyright laws. As such, you may not reprint or
publish in any format any article or portion of article from HR Matters E-
Tips without the express permission of Personnel Policy Service, Inc.
Remember, too, we encourage you to pass along any issue of the E-Tips
by forwarding it to friends and colleagues.
^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
A note to advertisers:
Do you want to reach the human resources market?
Your message can be seen by over 55,000 HR professionals when you
sponsor an issue of HR Matters E-Tips.
Contact Elise Whitman at
ezine@ppspublishers.com
or call toll-free 1-800-437-3735.
^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
HR Matters E-Tips is a f-r-e-e service of Personnel Policy Service, Inc.
To subscribe, go to:
http://www.ppspublishers.com/ezsignup.htm
© 2007 Personnel Policy Service, Inc. All Rights Reserved.
HR Matters is a registered trademark of:
Personnel Policy Service, Inc.
159 St. Matthews Ave., Suite 5, Louisville, KY 40207
Tel: 1-800-437-3735 - Fax: 1-800-755-7011
www.ppspublishers.com -
www.instanthrpolicies.com
-
www.hrpolicyanswers.com -
www.personnelpolicyservice.com/hrforum
CONTACT US: ezine@ppspublishers.com
FORWARD THIS ISSUE: We invite you to forward HR Matters E-Tips to
a colleague or friend.
|