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FMLA Compliance Seminar

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Title: FMLA Compliance Seminar


1
FMLA Compliance Seminar

2
TASC Confidentiality
  • This Seminar and all materials presented are the
    property of TASC. No part of this seminar or any
    of the materials provided may be reproduced or
    transmitted in any form or by any means,
    electronic, mechanical, photocopying, recording,
    or otherwise, without prior written permission
    from TASC. To the extent allowed by law, TASC
    intends to recoup any value lost by an
    unauthorized use or disclosure including the TASC
    profits that may have been lost or the profits
    made by the disclosing party.  
  • IRS Circular 230 disclosure To ensure compliance
    with requirements imposed by the IRS, we inform
    you that if any advice concerning one or more
    U.S. Federal tax issues is contained in this
    seminar material or is provided by a speaker at
    the seminar, such advice is not intended or
    written to be used, and cannot be used, for the
    purpose of (i) avoiding penalties under the
    Internal Revenue Code or (ii) promoting,
    marketing, or recommending to another party any
    transaction or matter addressed herein, and you
    should seek advice based on your particular
    circumstances from an independent tax advisor.

3
FMLA Topics
  • FMLA Defined
  • FMLA Eligibility
  • FMLA Qualifying Events
  • Understanding FMLA
  • Employer Rights
  • Types of Leave
  • Continued Benefits
  • Notification Requirements
  • Records and Storage

4
FMLA Defined
  • Family Medical Leave Act of 1993 (FMLA)
  • Enacted by Congress in 1993, the Family Medical
    Leave Act was a Federal Law intended to help
    employees better balance the demands of the
    workplace with the demands of their family and
    health. It has since been expanded to include
    Military caregiver leave, and leave for Military
    families during times of deployment to a foreign
    country.

5
What is FMLA?
  • Federal law applying to
  • all public employers, elementary and secondary
    schools regardless of the number of employees
    and
  • all private employers with over 50 employees on
    20 or more weeks the previous or current
    calendar's year payroll
  • Requires employers to have a written policy
  • Requires employers have posted signage in a
    common area
  • 110.00 per day fine possible for willful
    violations
  • Illegal to interfere, deny, or retaliate against
    an employee for utilizing FMLA rights.

6
FMLA Requirements
  • Employees have to give notice of an event to an
    employer
  • Employees dont have to know what FMLA is, or use
    the words FMLA
  • Employers have 5 days from the date of notice to
    respond with
  • Notice of Rights and Responsibilities
  • Notice of Eligibility
  • Request for Medical Certification
  • Outline Return to Work Requirements

7
FMLA Requirements
  • Employee has 15 days to provide medical
    certification
  • Employer has 5 days from the date medical is
    received to send Designation notice to the
    employee
  • Employers must have record of what days and times
    are FMLA protected and retain these records for 3
    years

8
Record Retention
  • DOL and FMLA regulations require that the
    following records be stored for 3 years
  • Basic payroll and identifying employee data,
    including name, address, occupation, rate of pay,
    terms of compensation, daily hours worked,
    deductions from wages and total compensation paid
  • Dates FMLA leave is taken by FMLA eligible
    employees
  • Hours of the leaves if not full days
  • Copies of all notices
  • Any documents describing employee benefits or
    employer policies regarding the taking of paid or
    unpaid leave

9
FMLA Employee Eligibility
  • Employee must have 12 months of service, and also
    needs 1250 hours worked in the 12 months
    preceding their need for Leave.
  • 12 months does not have to be consecutive, 1250
    hours does have to be in past 12 months.
  • Work at a location where there are 50 employees
    of the employer within a 75 mile radius
  • Former employees are also covered and are able to
    bring lawsuits (not re-hired due to past record)
    up to seven years.

10
FMLA Qualifying Events
  • Serious health condition for employee
  • Serious health condition has its own definition
    under the FMLA regulations
  • Birth of a child
  • Also covers Fathers for paternity leave
  • Placement of a child for Adoption or foster care
  • Serious health condition of a family member
  • Family Member is defined as only parents,
    spouses, and children under 18. Children over 18
    have to meet additional requirements
  • Qualified Exigency
  • For employees with deployed family members
  • Caring for Military Personnel
  • 26 week events

11
Definition Serious Health Condition
  1. Conditions requiring an overnight stay in a
    hospital or other medical care facility or
  2. Conditions that incapacitate employee or family
    member (for example, unable to work or attend
    school) for more than 3 consecutive days and have
    ongoing medical treatment (either multiple
    appointments with a health care provider, or a
    single appointment and follow-up care such as
    prescription medication) or
  3. Chronic conditions that cause occasional periods
    for employee or family member are incapacitated
    and require treatment by a health care provider
    at least twice a year or
  4. Pregnancy (including prenatal medical
    appointments, incapacity due to morning sickness,
    and medically required bed rest).

12
Definition Serious Health Condition- Adult
Child over 18
  • On January 14, 2013 the Department of Labor
    issued additional guidance clarifying the
    criterion for a child over age 18 to qualify for
    care under FMLA.
  • This clarification is in response to the
    Americans with Disability Act (ADA) being amended
    by the ADAAA (Americans with Disability Act
    Amendments Act of 2008) to expand the definition
    of disability.
  • Children over the age of 18 must be
  • Disabled according to ADAAA
  • Have a serious health condition
  • Incapable of self-care
  • Need care for that condition
  • Age the child became disabled doesnt matter for
    FMLA
  • Service member leave doesnt limit an employees
    leave entitlement to care for a child up to age
    27

13
FMLA Regulatory Changes Effective March 8, 2013
  • Changes to Military Family Leave (a partial
    listing)
  • Expanding caregiver leave to include care for
    veterans discharged within the past five years.
  • Allowing caregiver leave for a pre-existing
    injury or illness that was aggravated in the line
    of duty.
  • Extending exigency leave to family members of
    those serving in the Regular Armed Forces.
  • Requiring that service members be deployed to a
    foreign country in order for their family members
    to qualify for exigency leave.
  • Extending from 5 to 15 days employee leave during
    a military family members rest and
    recuperation period.
  • Additional Changes (a partial listing)
  • Enforcement of using lowest payroll method for
    FMLA calculations.
  • Revisions regarding (a) the physical
    impossibility of a return to work in the middle
    of a shift (FY), (b) 2010 National Defense
    Authorization Act (NDAA) amendments, and (c) the
    Airline Flight Crew Technical Corrections Act
    (AFCTCA).

14
FMLA Regulatory Changes Effective March 8, 2013
(contd)
  • What do Employers Need to do?
  • Update applicable posters. Updated versions of
    the Federal poster can be located here
    http//www.dol.gov/whd/regs/compliance/posters/fml
    aen.pdf
  • Update written policies to include the changes to
    the NDAA and AFCTCA amendments. A Frequently
    Asked Questions listing can be found here
    http//www.dol.gov/whd/fm
    la/2013rule/militaryFR_FAQs.htm
  • Educate managers to ensure they understand the
    additional FMLA qualifying events related to the
    expanded definitions.

15
Types of Leave
  • Continuous Taken in one block of time
  • Intermittent Taken in separate blocks of time as
    needed
  • Can take in smallest increment of time used by
    payroll.
  • May have incapacitations lasting up to a month.
  • May be a reduction of hours, such as no OT or
    reduced schedule.
  • Special rules apply to employees of local
    education agencies.
  • Generally, these rules apply to intermittent
    leave or when leave near the end of a school term.

16
Special Rules for School Instructional Employees
  • Leave taken for a period that ends with the
    school year and begins the next semester is leave
    taken consecutively rather than intermittently.
  • The period during the summer vacation when the
    employee would not have been required to report
    for duty is not counted against the employee's
    FMLA leave entitlement.
  • An instructional employee who is on FMLA leave at
    the end of the school year must be provided with
    any benefits over the summer vacation that
    employees would normally receive if they had been
    working at the end of the school year.
  • Rules apply only to a leave involving more than
    20 percent of the working days during the period
    over which the leave extends.
  • Employees taking leave which constitutes 20
    percent or less of the working days during the
    leave period would not be subject to transfer to
    an alternative position.

17
Understanding FMLA
  • Employer Defined ...any person who acts,
    directly or indirectly, in the interest of an
    employer to any of the employees of such
    employer... 20 U.S.C. 2611(4)(ii). An
    employer also includes any public agency.
  • So what does that mean?
  • Supervisors can be personally liable for
    violations of FMLA.
  • A recent Chicago verdict set a record 11.65
    Million dollar verdict, with 400,000.00 levied
    against two supervisors individually

18
ERISA Violations - Related to FMLA
  • ANCHORAGE, Alaska 2-2013 The U.S. Department of
    Labor and ASRC Energy Services Alaska Inc. have
    agreed to a consent judgment in federal court
    that will result in the payment of 43,000 in
    back wages for an employee who was allegedly
    terminated in violation of the Family and Medical
    Leave Act. The judgment also permanently enjoins
    the defendants from future violations of the
    FMLA.
  • The judgment and order resolve a lawsuit filed by
    the department in the U.S. District Court of the
    District of Alaska after an investigation by the
    Seattle District Office of the departments Wage
    and Hour Division. The investigation found that
    the employee was terminated while he was on leave
    for a serious health condition, in violation of
    the FMLA.
  • For more than two decades, the FMLAs
    job-protected leave entitlements have served as a
    critical safety net for our nations workers and
    families. This law continues to help achieve a
    healthy, productive balance between the demands
    of work and family life, said Donna Hart,
    director of the Wage and Hour Divisions Seattle
    District Office. This judgment demonstrates the
    departments commitment to ensuring employees
    receive all of the protections to which they are
    entitled under the FMLA, and to helping employers
    understand and comply with the law.
  • The division found that the employer incorrectly
    counted against the employees FMLA leave
    entitlement weeks that he was not scheduled to be
    at work and terminated him for exceeding the
    approved amount of leave. If an employee is not
    scheduled to report for work, that time period is
    not leave and, therefore, may not count against
    the employees 12-week FMLA leave entitlement.
    Investigators determined that the employer failed
    to comply with this requirement.

19
ERISA Violations - Related to FMLA (2)
  • Recent Violations Houston, TX
  • December 11, 2013 -Houston Ear, Nose Throat
    Clinic required to pay more than 17,000 in back
    wages following US Labor Department investigation
    .
  • The investigation found that the company violated
    the FMLA when an eligible employee returning to
    work, after taking FMLA leave, was not placed in
    the same full-time position held prior to using
    the job-protected leave. Instead, the employee
    was placed in a part-time position which resulted
    in fewer working hours and without the same
    benefits held before taking FMLA leave. Under the
    FMLA, an employee returning to work from FMLA
    leave is entitled to job restoration to the same
    or an equivalent position with the same pay,
    benefits and other employment terms and
    conditions. This violation resulted in 17,390 in
    back wages, medical expenses and unpaid monetary
    benefits due to the employee.
  • No employee should have to worry about their job
    when facing a serious health condition, said
    Cynthia Watson, regional administrator for the
    Wage and Hour Division in the Southwest. Coming
    back to work with the same seniority and benefits
    following an FMLA-related absence is not an
    option, it is the law. This employees
    reinstatement and subsequent collection of back
    wages should send a clear message to other
    employers that compliance with the FMLA is
    critical.
  • The employer was charged with several additional
    FMLA violations, including failing to provide the
    employee with the required notice designating the
    leave as FMLA failing to keep the proper records
    required by FMLA and failing to have a current
    FMLA policy reflecting the most recent provisions
    of the law. The employer agreed to reinstate the
    employee to the previously held full-time
    position with the same pay rate and benefits pay
    all the back wages due ensure that all eligible
    employees taking FMLA leave are properly provided
    with the required notices maintain the necessary
    records update its written FMLA policy and
    conduct FMLA training with its managers.

20
ERISA Violations - Related to FMLA (2)
  • Knoxville, TN October 8, 2013 - Motel 6 agrees
    to pay nearly 52,000 in back wages and to comply
    with the FMLA following US Department of Labor
    investigation
  • A typical violation in the hotel and motel
    industry is the failure to pay required overtime
    premiums, said Nettie Lewis, district director
    of the Wage and Hour Divisions Nashville
    District Office. These employees have worked
    long hours. As a result of our investigation,
    they are being paid the wages they have earned
    and now know the benefits and protections of the
    FMLA. We encourage other hotel and motel
    employers to learn from this case, review their
    practices and make a diligent effort to limit
    future liability by complying with the FLSA and
    FMLA.
  • An investigation conducted by the Divisions
    Nashville District Office disclosed that
    employees regularly worked more than 40 hours a
    week, but were only paid straight-time wages for
    all hours worked. The FLSA requires that workers
    be paid time and one-half their regular rates of
    pay for all overtime hours worked. The employer
    failed to post required FMLA posters in an area
    visible to workers and did not provide
    information about the FMLA in the companys
    handbook, in violation of FMLA requirements.
  • The Wage and Hour Division has noticed the
    noncompliance in this industry and is
    concentrating its resources on investigating and
    remedying violations, informing workers of their
    rights and providing compliance assistance to
    employers. Since 2009, the division has concluded
    nearly 5,000 cases involving hotel and motel
    employers, resulting in more than 15.1 million
    in back wages and FMLA violations for more than
    28,000 workers nationwide.

21
WHD Budget 2014
22
WHD Budget 2015
23
WHD investigations
  • Last year, the WHD received more than 2,100
    complaints alleging violations of the Family and
    Medical Leave Act (FMLA), and its investigations
    concluded that violations occurred in about half
    of those cases. The most common violations
    involved employers refusing to grant FMLA leave,
    illegally terminating employees who requested
    leave, and discriminating against employees who
    requested leave.

24
Employer Rights
  • Expect 30-day notice for planned absences and
    notice within 2 days of an unplanned event.
  • May require certification of condition from
    employee as frequently as every 30 days.
  • May insist on a second opinion.
  • May choose to require that paid time be used
    before unpaid time off is granted.
  • Employer is not liable for FMLA violation if the
    employee is not providing notice of the need for
    leave. Employee does not have to use the term
    FMLA for the employer to be obligated to
    recognize the event as a qualifying event under
    FMLA.

25
Continued Benefits
  • Employees accrued benefits are retained while on
    Leave
  • Health insurance - mandatory
  • Life insurance - if accrued
  • Disability - if accrued
  • Sick leave - if accrued
  • Pensions - if accrued
  • Benefits must be in force while Leave commences.
  • Employee responsible premiums may still be
    requested while on Leave.
  • May recover employer share of premiums if
    employee does not return from Leave.

26
FMLA Cost Association
  • Productivity
  • Leaves disrupt work routines and may cause
    confusion and distraction. Replacement workers
    and overtime wages may be required.
  • Extensive supervisor training is necessary.
  • Managers must consider FMLA absences separately
    from other performance issues.
  • Legal
  • State Leave laws are numerous and change often,
    requiring constant monitoring.
  • Managers can be held personally responsible for
    violations.
  • Litigation can cost 100K - 200K per claim, not
    including settlement costs.
  • Tracking Administration
  • Records maintenance and storage, supplies, staff
    time may duplicate management of other benefits
    such as disability and workers compensation.
  • HR is diverted from more strategic
    responsibilities.

27
Why Outsource FMLA?
  • Outsourced FMLA Administration is
  • Consistent
  • Efficient and accurate
  • Compliant a reduction in your company liability
    and manger and supervisor liability
  • Centralized
  • Positive Work Culture
  • Greater employee attraction and retention
  • Reduces workload for HR professionals
  • Monitors potential FMLA abuse by employees
  • Increasing employee comfort related to FMLA
    requests by removing PHI from HR staff

28
Outsourcing Advantage
  • Limit your risk
  • Reduce your workload
  • Distance your company from the personal aspect
    of FMLA administration
  • Increase your Bottom Line Peace of Mind!

29
FMLA Employee Employer Responsibilities
30
Compliance Solutions

31
Why FMLAMatters?
  • Consultative session to review LOA policies
  • 24/7 online FMLA activity reports
  • Provides all FMLA notices
  • Documentation of all communications
  • Provides storage and processing of medical
    certification for FMLA
  • Hold-harmless language installed in our service
    agreement
  • Health and legal professionals on retainer
  • Toll-free and online Leave request options
  • Staff trained on Federal and State Leave laws
  • Provides policy review to ensure compliance
  • Provides management and supervisory training in
    event identification and reporting
  • Account management team for superior service

32
Service Features
  • Complete compliance with FMLA state and federal
    regulations.
  • Complete tracking of employee Leave.
  • Fair application of FMLA regulations and
    policies.
  • Eligibility determination available.
  • Centralized and accurate record keeping.
  • Access to experienced employee benefits
    professionals.
  • Training for supervisors and managers on company
    procedures and FMLA state and federal
    regulations.
  • Full review of FMLA eligibility and entitlement.
  • FMLAMatters Administrative Manual.
  • FMLA activity reports.
  • Immediate denial notification.

33
Administrative Services
  • Multiple methods to report an FMLA event
  • Telephone
  • Employer On-line
  • Employee On-line (when eligibility is determined
    with TASC)
  • FMLAMatters assumes the responsibility and
    liability associated with FMLA Leave request by
  • Training management on recognition and process
  • Determinations Eligibility and Entitlement
  • Performing day-to-day administration and support

We deliver company compliance with a
hold-harmless guarantee.
34
Thank You!
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