This is a reminder that, beginning
January 16, 2009, employers will be required to comply
with the new Family and Medical Leave Act (FMLA)
regulations issued by the Department of Labor in
November 2008. As previously discussed, among numerous
other changes, the new regulations change the employer's
FMLA notice obligations by requiring employers to
provide employees:
(1) General Notice
about the FMLA, which the employer must provide
either in an employee handbook or in other written
materials concerning benefits and leave or, if the
employer does not have such materials, at the time
of hire;
(2) Eligibility Notice, which the employer
must provide within five business days of the date
an employee requests FMLA leave, or the employer
acquires knowledge that an employee's leave may be
FMLA-qualifying. This Notice addresses whether the
employee meets the statutory requirements of the
FMLA (that is, employment by the employer for 12
months; 1,250 hours of service in the 12-month
period immediately preceding the request for leave;
and employment at a worksite where 50 or more
employees are employed within 75 miles);
(3) Rights and Responsibilities Notice,
which the employer must provide simultaneously with
the Eligibility Notice and which provides detailed
information to the employee about his or her rights
and responsibilities under the FMLA; and
(4) Designation Notice, which requires the
employer to notify the employee whether a leave of
absence will be designated as FMLA leave. The
employer must provide this notice within five
business days, absent extenuating circumstances, of
when the employer has sufficient information to
determine whether the leave is being taken for an
FLMA-qualifying reason.
The new regulations also
revised the medical certification requirements for leave
taken because of the employee's own serious health
condition or the serious health condition of a family
member and set forth requirements for certification
supporting leave for a qualifying exigency and military
caregiver leave.
Employers should ensure that
their FMLA forms meet the requirements of the new
regulations, either by using the model forms the DOL
provided when it issued the new regulations or ensuring
that their forms contain the same information as the
model forms. If you have questions regarding the new
regulations or need assistance reviewing and revising
your policies or implementing the new notice procedure,
please contact the Ford & Harrison attorney with whom
you usually work.