Medical Leave Law

The Family and Medical Leave Act of 1993 ("FMLA") is the medical leave law of the US government. FMLA was enacted by the US Department of Labor and applies to all state and local public agencies including education agencies and private-sector employers who employ at least 50 people in 20 or more workweeks in the current or preceding calendar year. If FMLA leave is foreseeable, an employee must give at least 30-days advanced notice to their employer. If emergency family leave is not foreseeable, notice must be given to the employer as soon as possible (i.e. the same or next business day). The FMLA allows eligible employees to take a temporary leave for illness in their immediate family. FMLA benefits include twelve weeks of unpaid leave for employees who must care for an ill family member or new child or to get treatment for their own illness. Medical leave law provides benefits that generally apply an employee's immediate family, including: parents, step-parents, spouse, children, step-children and foster children, siblings and step-siblings, and any relative (by blood or marriage) currently living in the employee's household.

Fast Facts

  • The FMLA medical leave law extends benefits to employees that have worked for their employer for at least 12 months and a minimum of 1 ,250 hours over the prior 12 months. The employer must also be subject to FMLA compliance.
  • Upon return from medical leave under the FMLA, an employee must be restored to their original job or to an equivalent position with the same salary.

medical leave law - Lawyers, Articles and Q&A

Search Results for "medical leave law"

Articles

Results 1-5 of 226 for "medical leave law"

Q&A

Results 1-5 of 7 for "medical leave law"

From Around the Web

Results 1-5 of 8 for "medical leave law"

SF4:0.7.5.100311.8484-