Paid Leave Under the Families First Coronavirus Response Act, 19326-19357 [2020-07237]
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Federal Register / Vol. 85, No. 66 / Monday, April 6, 2020 / Rules and Regulations
O. Prohibited Acts and Enforcement
P. Effect of Other Laws, Employer
Practices, and Collective Bargaining
Agreements
IV. Statutory and Regulatory Requirements
A. Administrative Procedure Act
B. Executive Order 12866, Regulatory
Planning and Review; and Executive
Order 13563, Improved Regulation and
Regulatory Review
C. Regulatory Flexibility Act
D. Unfunded Mandates Reform Act of 1995
E. Executive Order 13132 (Federalism)
F. Indian Tribal Governments
G. Paperwork Reduction Act
DEPARTMENT OF LABOR
Wage and Hour Division
29 CFR Part 826
RIN 1235–AA35
Paid Leave Under the Families First
Coronavirus Response Act
Wage and Hour Division,
Department of Labor.
ACTION: Temporary rule.
AGENCY:
The Secretary of Labor
(‘‘Secretary’’) is promulgating temporary
regulations to implement public health
emergency leave under Title I of the
Family and Medical Leave Act (FMLA),
and emergency paid sick leave to assist
working families facing public health
emergencies arising out of Coronavirus
Disease 2019 (COVID–19) global
pandemic. The leave is created by a
time-limited statutory authority
established under the Families First
Coronavirus Response Act, Public Law
116–127 (FFCRA), and is set to expire
on December 31, 2020. The FFCRA and
this temporary rule do not affect the
FMLA after December 31, 2020.
DATES: This rule is effective from April
2, 2020, through December 31, 2020.
This rule became operational on April 1,
2020.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT:
Amy DeBisschop, Director, Division of
Regulations, Legislation, and
Interpretation, Wage and Hour Division,
U.S. Department of Labor, Room S–
3502, 200 Constitution Avenue NW,
Washington, DC 20210, telephone: (202)
693–0406 (this is not a toll-free
number).
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
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SUMMARY:
I. Executive Summary
II. Background
A. Emergency Paid Sick Leave Act (EPSLA)
B. Emergency Family and Medical Leave
Expansion Act (EFMLEA)
III. Discussion
A. General
B. Paid Leave Entitlements
C. Employee Eligibility
D. Employer Coverage
E. Intermittent Leave
F. Leave To Care for a Child Due to School
or Place of Care Closure or Child Care
Unavailability—Interaction Between the
EPSLA and the EFMLEA
G. Leave To Care for a Child Due to School
or Place of Care Closure or Child Care
Unavailability—Interaction Between the
EFMLEA and the FMLA
H. Employer Notice
I. Employee Notice of Need for Leave
J. Documentation of Need for Leave
K. Health Care Coverage
L. Multiemployer Plans
M. Return to Work
N. Recordkeeping
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I. Executive Summary
On March 18, 2020, President Trump
signed into law the FFCRA, which
creates two new emergency paid leave
requirements in response to the COVID–
19 global pandemic. Division E of the
FFCRA, ‘‘The Emergency Paid Sick
Leave Act’’ (EPSLA), entitles certain
employees to take up to two weeks of
paid sick leave. Division C of the
FFCRA, ‘‘The Emergency Family and
Medical Leave Expansion Act’’
(EFMLEA), which amends Title I of the
Family and Medical Leave Act, 29
U.S.C. 2601 et seq. (FMLA), permits
certain employees to take up to twelve
weeks of expanded family and medical
leave, ten of which are paid, for
specified reasons related to COVID–19.
On March 27, 2020, President Trump
signed into law the Coronavirus Aid,
Relief, and Economic Security Act,
Public Law 116–136 (CARES Act),
which amends certain provisions of the
EPSLA and the provisions of the FMLA
added by the EFMLEA.
In general, the FFCRA requires
covered employers to provide eligible
employees up to two weeks of paid sick
leave at full pay, up to a specified cap,
when the employee is unable to work
because the employee is subject to a
Federal, State, or local quarantine or
isolation order related to COVID–19, has
been advised by a health care provider
to self-quarantine due to concerns
related to COVID–19, or is experiencing
COVID–19 symptoms and seeking a
medical diagnosis. The FFCRA also
provides up to two weeks of paid sick
leave at partial pay, up to a specified
cap, when an employee is unable to
work because of a need to care for an
individual subject to a Federal, State, or
local quarantine or isolation order
related to COVID–19 or who has been
advised by a health care provider to selfquarantine due to concerns related to
COVID–19; because of a need to care for
the employee’s son or daughter whose
school or place of care is closed, or
whose child care provider is
unavailable, due to COVID–19 related
reasons; or because the employee is
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experiencing a substantially similar
condition, as specified by the Secretary
of Health and Human Services. The
FFCRA also requires covered employers
to provide up to twelve weeks of
expanded family and medical leave, up
to ten weeks of which must be paid at
partial pay, up to a specified cap, when
an eligible employee is unable to work
because of a need to care for the
employee’s son or daughter whose
school or place of care is closed, or
whose child care provider is
unavailable, due to COVID–19 related
reasons.
The FFCRA covers private employers
with fewer than 500 employees and
certain public employers. Small
employers with fewer than 50
employees may qualify for an
exemption from the requirement to
provide paid leave due to school, place
of care, or child care provider closings
or unavailability, if the leave payments
would jeopardize the viability of their
business as a going concern.
Under the FFCRA, covered private
employers qualify for reimbursement
through refundable tax credits as
administered by the Department of the
Treasury, for all qualifying paid sick
leave wages and qualifying family and
medical leave wages paid to an
employee who takes leave under the
FFCRA, up to per diem and aggregate
caps, and for allocable costs related to
the maintenance of health care coverage
under any group health plan while the
employee is on the leave provided
under the FFCRA. For information on
the tax credits, see https://www.irs.gov/
forms-pubs/about-form-7200 see also
https://www.irs.gov/pub/irs-drop/n-2021.pdf. For more information on the
COVID–19 related small business loans,
see https://www.sba.gov/page/
coronavirus-covid-19-small-businessguidance-loan-resources.
The CARES Act amended the FFCRA
by providing certain technical
corrections, as well as clarifying the
caps for payment of leave; expanded
family and medical leave to certain
employees who were laid off or
terminated after March 1, 2020, but are
reemployed by the same employer prior
to December 31, 2020; and provided
authority to the Director of the Office of
Management and Budget (OMB) to
exclude certain Federal employees from
paid sick leave and expanded family
and medical leave.
The FFCRA grants authority to the
Secretary to issue regulations for certain
purposes. In particular, sections
3102(b), as amended by section 3611(7)
of the CARES Act, and 5111(3) of the
FFCRA grant the Secretary authority to
issue regulations ‘‘as necessary, to carry
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out the purposes of this Act, including
to ensure consistency’’ between the
EPSLA and the EFMLEA. The
Department is issuing this temporary
rule to carry out the purposes of the
FFCRA. These new paid sick leave and
expanded family and medical leave
requirements became operational on
April 1, 2020, effective on April 2, 2020,
and will expire on December 31, 2020.
Pursuant to the Congressional Review
Act (5 U.S.C. 801 et seq.), the Office of
Information and Regulatory Affairs
(OIRA) designated this rule as a ‘‘major
rule’’, as defined by 5 U.S.C. 804(2).
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II. Background
A. Emergency Paid Sick Leave Act
(EPSLA)
The EPSLA requires employers to
provide paid sick leave to employees
who are unable to work for six reasons
having to do with COVID–19 where the
employee (1) is subject to a Federal,
State, or local quarantine or isolation
order related to COVID–19; (2) has been
advised by a health care provider to selfquarantine due to concerns related to
COVID–19; (3) is experiencing
symptoms of COVID–19 and is seeking
a medical diagnosis; (4) is caring for an
individual who is subject to an order as
described in (1), or who has been
advised as described in (2); (5) is caring
for his or her son or daughter whose
school or place of care has been closed
or whose child care provider is
unavailable due to COVID–19 related
reasons; or (6) is experiencing any other
substantially similar condition specified
by the Secretary of Health and Human
Services in consultation with the
Secretary of the Treasury and the
Secretary of Labor.
Private employers with fewer than
500 employees, as well as public
agencies with one or more employees,
must comply with the EPSLA, although
the Secretary has authority to exempt by
rulemaking certain employers with
fewer than 50 employees from providing
paid sick leave to an employee who is
unable to work because the employee is
caring for his or her son or daughter
whose school or place of care has been
closed or whose child care provider is
unavailable due to COVID–19 related
reasons when compliance with this
requirement would ‘‘jeopardize the
viability of the business as a going
concern.’’ FFCRA sections
5100(2)(B)(i)–(ii), 5111(2). The EPSLA
applies to employees of covered
employers regardless of how long an
employee has worked for an employer,
except that employers may exclude
employees who are health care
providers or emergency responders from
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taking paid sick leave; similarly, the
Secretary has the authority to exclude
by rulemaking ‘‘certain health care
providers and emergency responders’’
from the requirements of the EPSLA.
FFCRA sections 5102(a), 5102(e)(1),
5111(1). The CARES Act also added
certain exemptions that may apply to
Federal employers and employees,
which are discussed below.
The EPSLA entitles full-time covered
employees to up to 80 hours of paid sick
leave, and generally entitles part-time
employees to up to the number of hours
that they work on average over a twoweek period, although special rules may
apply to part-time employees with
varying schedules. For an employee
who takes paid sick leave because he or
she is subject to a quarantine or
isolation order, has been advised to selfquarantine by a health care provider, or
is experiencing symptoms of COVID–19
and is seeking a medical diagnosis, the
EPSLA provides for paid sick leave at
the greater of the employee’s regular rate
of pay under section 7(e) of the Fair
Labor Standards Act of 1938, as
amended, 29 U.S.C. 201 et seq. (FLSA)
(29 U.S.C. 207(e)), or the applicable
minimum wage (federal, state, or local),
up to $511 per day and $5,110 in the
aggregate. An employee who takes paid
sick leave for any other qualifying
reason under the EPSLA is entitled to be
paid two-thirds of that amount, up to
$200 per day and $2,000 in the
aggregate. An employer may not require
an employee to use other paid leave
provided by the employer before the
employee uses the paid sick leave, nor
may an employer require the employee
involved to search for or find a
replacement employee to cover the
hours during which the employee is
using paid sick leave.
The EPSLA also provides that
employers who fail to provide paid sick
leave as required are considered to have
failed to pay minimum wages in
violation of section 6 of the FLSA, and
that such employers are subject to
enforcement proceedings described in
sections 16 and 17 of the FLSA. 29
U.S.C. 206, 216, 217. In addition, the
EPSLA prohibits employers from
discharging, disciplining, or in any
other manner discriminating against an
employee who takes paid sick leave
under the EPSLA, files any complaint
under or relating to the EPSLA,
institutes any proceeding under or
relating to the EPSLA, or testifies in any
such proceeding. See FFCRA section
5104, as amended by CARES Act section
3611(8). Employers who violate this
prohibition are considered to have
violated section 15(a)(3) of the FLSA,
and are subject to the penalties
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described in sections 216 and 217 of the
FLSA. 29 U.S.C. 215(a)(3), 216, 217. The
EPSLA also authorizes the Secretary to
investigate and gather data to ensure
compliance with the EPSLA in the same
manner as authorized by sections 9 and
11 of the FLSA, and the CARES Act
section 3611(9) (adding FFCRA section
5105(c)); 29 U.S.C. 209, 211.
The EPSLA requires employers to
post a notice of employees’ rights under
the EPSLA. It permits, but does not
require, employers who are signatories
to multiemployer collective bargaining
agreements to fulfill their obligations
under the EPSLA by making
contributions to a multiemployer fund,
plan, or program, subject to certain
requirements. Nothing in the EPSLA
diminishes the rights or benefits that an
employee is entitled to under any other
Federal, State, or local law; collective
bargaining agreement; or existing
employer policy. Moreover, the EPSLA
does not require financial or other
reimbursement by an employer to an
employee for unused paid sick leave
upon the employee’s separation from
employment.
B. Emergency Family and Medical Leave
Expansion Act (EFMLEA)
The EFMLEA requires employers to
provide expanded paid family and
medical leave to eligible employees who
are unable to work because the
employee is caring for his or her son or
daughter whose school or place of care
is closed or whose child care provider
is unavailable due to a public health
emergency, defined as an emergency
with respect to COVID–19, declared by
a Federal, State, or local authority.
The EFMLEA applies to different sets
of employers and employees from the
other provisions of the FMLA. Private
employers with fewer than 500
employees must comply with the
EFMLEA, although the Secretary has the
authority to exempt by rulemaking
employers with fewer than 50
employees from EFMLEA’s
requirements when compliance with the
EFMLEA would ‘‘jeopardize the
viability of the business as a going
concern.’’ FFCRA section 3102(b)
(adding FMLA section 110(a)(1)(B),
(3)(B)). Generally, public agencies as
defined at § 826.10(a) must comply with
the EFMLEA. As it relates to the Federal
government, however, only those
Federal employees covered by Title I of
the FMLA are potentially eligible under
the EFMLEA. 29 U.S.C. 2611(2)(B)(i).
The EFMLEA applies to employees of
covered employers if such employees
have been employed by the employer
for at least 30 calendar days. This
includes employees who were laid off or
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otherwise terminated on or after March
1, 2020, had worked for the employer
for at least thirty of the prior 60 calendar
days, and were subsequently rehired or
otherwise reemployed by the same
employer. CARES Act section 3605
(amending FMLA section 110(a)(1)(A)).
As with the EPSLA, employers may,
however, exclude employees who are
health care providers or emergency
responders from taking expanded family
and medical leave, and similarly, the
Secretary has the authority to exclude
by rulemaking ‘‘certain health care
providers and emergency responders’’
from the requirements of the EFMLEA.
An employee is entitled to take up to
twelve weeks of leave for the purpose
described in the EFMLEA. 29 U.S.C.
2611(a)(1). The first two weeks (usually
ten workdays) of this leave are unpaid,
though an employee may substitute paid
sick leave under the EPSLA or paid
leave under the employer’s preexisting
policies for these two weeks of unpaid
leave. Unlike FMLA leave taken for
other reasons, the following period of
up to ten weeks of expanded family and
medical leave must be paid.
Specifically, after the first two weeks of
leave, expanded family and medical
leave under the FFCRA must be paid at
two-thirds the employee’s regular rate of
pay. For each day of leave, the employee
receives compensation based on the
number of hours he or she would
otherwise be normally scheduled to
work, although special rules may apply
to employees with varying schedules.
An eligible employee may elect to use,
or an employer may require that an
employee use, such expanded family
and medical leave concurrently with
any leave offered under the employer’s
policies that would be available for the
employee to take to care for his or her
child, such as vacation or personal leave
or paid time off. The total EFMLEA
payment per employee for this ten-week
period is capped at $200 per day and
$10,000 in the aggregate, for a total of
no more than $12,000 when combined
with two weeks of paid leave taken
under the EPSLA.
The EFMLEA provides that if the
need for expanded family and medical
leave is foreseeable, employees shall
provide employers with notice of the
leave as soon as practicable. The
EFMLEA defines conditions under
which employees who take leave are
entitled to be restored to their positions,
while exempting employers with fewer
than twenty-five employees from this
requirement under certain
circumstances. The FMLA’s general
prohibitions on interference with rights
and discrimination, 29 U.S.C. 2615, as
well as the FMLA’s enforcement
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provisions, 29 U.S.C. 2617, apply for
purposes of the EFMLEA, except that an
employee’s right to file a lawsuit
directly against an employer does not
extend to employers who were not
previously covered by the FMLA.
The EFMLEA permits, but does not
require, employers who are signatories
to multiemployer collective bargaining
agreements to fulfill their obligations
under the EFMLEA by making
contributions to a multiemployer fund,
plan, or program, subject to certain
requirements.
III. Discussion
The paid leave requirements of the
EPSLA and the EFMLEA are described
and interpreted by the Secretary in
regulations to appear in new Part 826 of
Title 29 of the Code of Federal
Regulations, and addressed below.
A. General
Section 826.10 contains definitions of
terms used in the EPSLA and the
EFMLEA as well as in this rule. As a
general matter, the FMLA definitions
apply to the EFMLEA unless specific
definitions were included in the
EFMLEA. The majority of the terms
found in the EPSLA and the EFMLEA
are based on terms that are defined in
other statutes and/or their implementing
regulations, such as the FLSA. For
example, the EPSLA expressly adopts
the definition of ‘‘person’’ from the
FLSA and the definition of ‘‘son or
daughter’’ from the FMLA.
The EFMLEA defines ‘‘qualifying
need related to a public health
emergency’’ as a need for leave ‘‘to care
for the son or daughter under 18 years
of age of such employee if the school or
place of care has been closed, or the
child care provider of such son or
daughter is unavailable, due to a public
health emergency.’’ FFCRA section
3102(b) (adding FMLA section
110(a)(1)(A)). This definition could be
read to narrow the FMLA definition of
‘‘son or daughter’’ for purposes of
expanded family and medical leave, as
the FMLA expressly includes children
18 years of age or older and incapable
of self-care because of a mental or
physical disability. 29 U.S.C. 2611(12).
The EFMLEA does not contain a
definition of ‘‘son or daughter,’’
however, and therefore the FMLA
definition of that term applies to
expanded family and medical leave. The
EPSLA also adopts the FMLA definition
of ‘‘son or daughter.’’ As addressed
more fully below in the discussion of
§ 826.20, the Department believes it
would create needless confusion and
complication to have different rules
under the EFMLEA and the EPSLA for
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when an employee may take leave to
care for his or her son or daughter
whose school or place of care is closed
or child care provider is unavailable due
to COVID–19 related reasons. The
Department is therefore treating the
definitions as the same (i.e., to include
children under 18 years of age and
children age 18 or older who are
incapable of self-care because of a
mental or physical disability), pursuant
to its statutory authority to issue
regulations to ensure consistency
between the EPSLA and the EFMLEA.
Only one other definition in the
FFCRA—‘‘telework’’—bears further
discussion here. Section 826.10 defines
the word broadly to effectuate the
statute’s underlying purposes and also
outlines when an employee is able to
telework. The definition also clarifies
that telework is no less work than if it
were performed at an employer’s
worksite. As a result, employees who
are teleworking for COVID–19 related
reasons must always record—and be
compensated for—all hours actually
worked, including overtime, in
accordance with the requirements of the
FLSA. See 29 CFR 785.11–13; 785.48;
see also 29 U.S.C. 206, 207; 29 CFR part
778. However, an employer is not
required to compensate employees for
unreported hours worked while
teleworking for COVID–19 related
reasons, unless the employer knew or
should have known about such
telework. See, e.g., Allen v. City of
Chicago, 865 F.3d 936 (7th Cir. 2017),
cert. denied, 138 S. Ct. 1302, 200 L. Ed.
2d 474 (2018). While the Department’s
regulations and interpretations of the
FLSA generally apply to employees who
are teleworking for COVID–19 related
reasons, the Department has concluded
that § 790.6 and its continuous workday
guidance are inconsistent with the
objectives of the FFCRA and CARES Act
only with respect to such employees.
The FFCRA and these regulations
encourage employers and employees to
implement highly flexible telework
arrangements that allow employees to
perform work, potentially at
unconventional times, while tending to
family and other responsibilities, such
as teaching children whose schools are
closed for COVID–19 related reasons.
But section 790.6 and the Department’s
continuous workday guidance generally
provide that all time between
performance of the first and last
principal activities is compensable work
time. See 29 CFR 790.6(a). Applying this
guidance to employers with employees
who are teleworking for COVID–19
related reasons would disincentivize
and undermine the very flexibility in
teleworking arrangements that are
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critical to the FFCRA framework
Congress created within the broader
national response to COVID–19. As a
result, the Department has determined
that an employer allowing such
flexibility during the COVID–19
pandemic shall not be required to count
as hours worked all time between the
first and last principal activity
performed by an employee teleworking
for COVID–19 related reasons as hours
worked. For example, an employee may
agree with an employer to perform
telework for COVID–19 related reasons
on the following schedule: 7–9 a.m.,
12:30–3 p.m., and 7–9 p.m. on
weekdays. This allows an employee, for
example, to help teach children whose
school is closed or assist the employee’s
parents who are temporarily living with
the family, reserving work times when
there are fewer distractions. Of course,
the employer must compensate the
employee for all hours actually
worked—7.5 hours—that day, but not
all 14 hours between the employee’s
first principal activity at 7 a.m. and last
at 9 p.m. Section 790.6 and the
Department’s guidance regarding the
continuous workday continue to apply
to all employees who are not
teleworking for COVID–19 related
reasons.
B. Paid Leave Entitlements
Section 826.20 of Title 29 of the Code
of Federal Regulations describes the
circumstances under which a covered
employer must provide paid sick leave
and/or expanded family and medical
leave to an eligible employee.
Section 826.20(a) explains that an
employee may take paid sick leave if the
employee is unable to work because of
any one of six qualifying reasons related
to COVID–19. The first reason for paid
sick leave applies where an employee is
unable to work because he or she is
subject to a Federal, State, or local
COVID–19 quarantine or isolation order.
Quarantine or isolation orders include a
broad range of governmental orders,
including orders that advise some or all
citizens to shelter in place, stay at home,
quarantine, or otherwise restrict their
own mobility. Section 826.20(a)(2)
explains that an employee may take
paid sick leave only if being subject to
one of these orders prevents him or her
from working or teleworking as
described therein. The question is
whether the employee would be able to
work or telework ‘‘but for’’ being
required to comply with a quarantine or
isolation order.
An employee subject to one of these
orders may not take paid sick leave
where the employer does not have work
for the employee. This is because the
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employee would be unable to work even
if he or she were not required to comply
with the quarantine or isolation order.
For example, if a coffee shop closes
temporarily or indefinitely due to a
downturn in business related to COVID–
19, it would no longer have any work
for its employees. A cashier previously
employed at the coffee shop who is
subject to a stay-at-home order would
not be able to work even if he were not
required to stay at home. As such, he
may not take paid sick leave because his
inability to work is not due to his need
to comply with the stay-at-home order,
but rather due to the closure of his place
of employment.1 That said, he may be
eligible for state unemployment
insurance and should contact his State
workforce agency or State
unemployment insurance office for
specific questions about his eligibility.
Additionally, § 826.20(a)(2) explains
that an employee subject to a quarantine
or isolation order is able to telework,
and therefore may not take paid sick
leave, if (a) his or her employer has
work for the employee to perform; (b)
the employer permits the employee to
perform that work from the location
where the employee is being
quarantined or isolated; and (c) there are
no extenuating circumstances that
prevent the employee from performing
that work. For example, if a law firm
permits its lawyers to work from home,
a lawyer would not be prevented from
working by a stay-at-home order, and
thus may not take paid sick leave as a
result of being subject to that order. In
this circumstance, the lawyer is able to
telework even if she is required to use
her own computer instead of her
employer’s computer. But, she would
not be able to telework in the event of
a power outage or similar extenuating
circumstance and would therefore be
eligible for paid sick leave during the
period of the power outage or
extenuating circumstance due to the
quarantine or isolation order.
The second reason for paid sick leave
applies where an employee is unable to
work because he or she has been
advised by a health care provider, as
defined in 29 CFR 825.102, to selfquarantine for a COVID–19 reason.
Section 826.20(a)(3) explains that the
1 This analysis holds even if the closure of the
coffee shop was substantially caused by a stay-athome order. If the coffee shop closed due to its
customers being required to stay at home, the
reason for the cashier being unable to work would
be because those customers were subject to the stayat-home order, not because the cashier himself was
subject to the order. Similarly, if the order forced
the coffee shop to close, the reason for the cashier
being unable to work would be because the coffee
shop was subject to the order, not because the
cashier himself was subject to the order.
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advice to self-quarantine must be based
on the health care provider’s belief that
the employee has COVID–19, may have
COVID–19, or is particularly vulnerable
to COVID–19. And, self-quarantining
must prevent the employee from
working. An employee who is selfquarantining is able to telework, and
therefore may not take paid sick leave
for this reason, if (a) his or her employer
has work for the employee to perform;
(b) the employer permits the employee
to perform that work from the location
where the employee is selfquarantining; and (c) there are no
extenuating circumstances, such as
serious COVID–19 symptoms, that
prevent the employee from performing
that work. For instance, if the lawyer in
the above example would be able to
work while self-quarantining at home,
she may not take paid sick leave due to
a need to self-quarantine.
The third reason for paid sick leave
applies where an employee is
experiencing symptoms of COVID–19
and seeking a medical diagnosis.
Section 826.20(a)(4) explains that
symptoms that could trigger this are:
Fever, dry cough, shortness of breath, or
other COVID–19 symptoms identified
by the U.S. Centers for Disease Control
and Prevention (CDC). Additionally,
paid sick leave taken for this reason
must be limited to the time the
employee is unable to work because he
or she is taking affirmative steps to
obtain a medical diagnosis. Thus, an
employee experiencing COVID–19
symptoms may take paid sick leave, for
instance, for time spent making, waiting
for, or attending an appointment for a
test for COVID–19. But, the employee
may not take paid sick leave to selfquarantine without seeking a medical
diagnosis. An employee who is waiting
for the results of a test is able to
telework, and therefore may not take
paid sick leave, if: (a) His or her
employer has work for the employee to
perform; (b) the employer permits the
employee to perform that work from the
location where the employee is waiting;
and (c) there are no extenuating
circumstances, such as serious COVID–
19 symptoms, that may prevent the
employee from performing that work.
An employee may continue to take leave
while experiencing any of the symptoms
specified at § 826.20(a)(4), however; or
may continue to take leave after testing
positive for COVID–19, regardless of
symptoms experienced, provided that
the health care provider advises the
employee to self-quarantine. In
addition, an employee who is unable to
telework may continue to take paid sick
leave under this reason while awaiting
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a test result, regardless of the severity of
the COVID–19 symptoms that he or she
might be experiencing. In the case of an
employee who exhibits COVID–19
symptoms and seeks medical advice but
is told that he or she does not meet the
criteria for testing and is advised to selfquarantine, he or she is eligible for leave
under the second reason, provided he or
she meets all the requirements spelled
out above.
The fourth reason for paid sick leave
applies where an employee is unable to
work because he or she needs to care for
an individual who is either: (a) Subject
to a Federal, State, or local quarantine
or isolation order; or (b) has been
advised by a health care provider to selfquarantine due to concerns related to
COVID–19. This qualifying reason
applies only if but for a need to care for
an individual, the employee would be
able to perform work for his or her
employer. Accordingly, an employee
caring for an individual may not take
paid sick leave if the employer does not
have work for him or her. Furthermore,
if the employee must have a genuine
need to care for the individual.
Accordingly, § 826.20(a)(5) explains that
paid sick leave may not be taken to care
for someone with whom the employee
has no personal relationship. Rather, the
individual being cared for must be an
immediate family member, roommate,
or a similar person with whom the
employee has a relationship that creates
an expectation that the employee would
care for the person if he or she selfquarantined or was quarantined.
Additionally, the individual being cared
for must: (a) Be subject to a Federal,
State, or local quarantine or isolation
order as described above; or (b) have
been advised by a health care provider
to self-quarantine based on a belief that
he or she has COVID–19, may have
COVID–19, or is particularly vulnerable
to COVID–19.
The fifth reason for paid sick leave
applies when the employee is unable to
work because the employee needs to
care for his or her son or daughter if: (a)
The child’s school or place of care has
closed; or (b) the child care provider is
unavailable, due to COVID–19 related
reasons. Again, the employee must be
able to perform work for his or her
employer but for the need to care for his
or her son or daughter, which means an
employee may not take paid sick leave
if the employer does not have work for
him or her. Moreover, an employee may
take paid sick leave to care for his or her
child only when the employee needs to,
and actually is, caring for his or her
child. Generally, an employee does not
need to take such leave if another
suitable individual—such as a co-
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parent, co-guardian, or the usual child
care provider—is available to provide
the care the employee’s child needs.
The sixth reason for paid sick leave
applies if the employee is unable to
work because the employee is
experiencing any other substantially
similar condition specified by the
Secretary of Health and Human Services
in consultation with the Secretary of the
Treasury and the Secretary of Labor.
Section 826.20(b) explains that an
employee may take expanded family
and medical leave if the employee is
unable to work due to a need for leave
to care for his or her son or daughter if
the child’s school or place of care is
closed, or the child care provider of
such son or daughter is unavailable, for
reasons related to COVID–19. The
EFMLEA provides that this reason for
leave is for closures or unavailability
‘‘due to a public health emergency,’’
which the statute defines as ‘‘an
emergency with respect to COVID–19
declared by a Federal, State, or local
authority.’’ FFCRA section 3102(b)
(adding FMLA section 110(a)(2)(A), (B)).
In keeping with the Department’s
statutory authority to issue regulations
to ensure consistency between the
EPSLA and the EFMLEA, the regulatory
text uses ‘‘for reasons related to COVID–
19’’ to match the regulatory text related
to the same reason for taking paid sick
leave. In other words, the leave
authorized by the EFMLEA is the same
as the fifth reason discussed above
authorized by the EPSLA, i.e., leave
required when an employee is unable to
work because of a need to care for his
or her son or daughter if the school or
place of care of the son or daughter is
closed, or the child care provider of the
son or daughter is unavailable, due to
COVID–19 related reasons.
The Department recognizes that
section 3102 of the EFMLEA defines
‘‘qualifying need related to a public
health emergency’’ as a need for leave
‘‘to care for the son or daughter under
18 years of age of such employee if the
school or place of care has been closed,
or the child care provider of such son
or daughter is unavailable, due to a
public health emergency.’’ FFCRA
section 3102(b) (adding FMLA section
110(a)(2)(A), (B)). This definition can be
read to narrow the FMLA definition of
son or daughter, which includes
children under 18 years of age or 18
years of age or older and incapable of
self-care because of a mental or physical
disability. 29 U.S.C. 2611(12). Section
5110(4) of the EPSLA states that the
FMLA definition of son or daughter
applies when, among other things, the
employee is unable to work because the
employee is caring for a son or daughter
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of the employee if: (a) The school or
place of care of the son or daughter has
been closed; or (b) the child care
provider of such son or daughter is
unavailable, due to COVID–19 related
reasons.
The Department considered
interpreting the leave provision of the
EFMLEA to apply only when an
employee is unable to work because of
a need to care for a child under age 18
years of age, and not to apply when a
child is 18 years of age or older and
incapable of self-care because of a
mental or physical disability. The
Department also recognizes there could
be other interpretations of the ‘‘under 18
years of age’’ phrase within the
EFMLEA. However, the Department has
decided not to employ these alternative
interpretations because it sees
significant disadvantages to having
different rules under the EFMLEA and
the EPSLA for when an employee may
take leave to care for his or her son or
daughter. Having different rules would
introduce unnecessary complexity and
incongruity into the leave provisions
and could improperly deny leave to
employees with a need to care for a
child age 18 or older who is incapable
of caring for himself or herself because
of a mental or physical disability. The
Department is therefore treating the
definitions as the same pursuant to its
authority under section 5111 of the
EPSLA and section 110(a) of the FMLA,
as amended by the EFMLEA, and the
CARES Act, and will issue regulations
to ensure consistency between the
EPSLA and the EFMLEA.
The Department intends that
providing maximum flexibility to
employers and employees during the
public health emergency should not
impact the underlying relationships
between an employer and an employee.
More specifically, nothing in this Act
should be construed as impacting an
employee’s exempt status under the
FLSA. For example, an employee’s use
of intermittent leave combined with
either paid sick leave or expanded
family and medical leave should not be
construed as undermining the
employee’s salary basis for purposes of
29 U.S.C. 213 and 29 CFR part 541.
Section 826.21 explains how much
paid sick leave an employee is entitled
to under the EPSLA. Under section
5102(b)(2) of the EPSLA, a full-time
employee is entitled to 80 hours of paid
sick leave, and a part-time employee is
entitled to the ‘‘number of hours that
such employee works, on average, over
a 2-week period.’’ Section 5110(5)(C)(i)
further provides that if the part-time
employee’s ‘‘schedule varies from week
to week . . . the average number of
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hours that the employee was scheduled
per day over the 6-month period ending
on the date on which the employee
takes the paid sick time’’ shall be used
in place of the ‘‘number of hours that
such employee works, on average, over
a 2-week period’’ under section
5102(b)(2)(B) to determine the number
of paid sick leave hours.
The Department does not believe the
EPSLA intended to replace the average
number of hours worked ‘‘over a 2-week
period’’ with the average number of
hours scheduled ‘‘per day’’ as the
number of paid sick leave hours because
such replacement would create a
contradiction within the statute and
lead to an absurd outcome. Setting
hours of paid sick leave ‘‘equal to the
average number of hours that the
employee was scheduled per day,’’ as
section 5110(5)(C)(i) requires, would
violate the requirement under section
5102(b)(2)(B) that ‘‘hours of paid sick
time to which an employee is entitled
shall be . . . equal to the number of
hours that such employee works, on
average, over a 2-week period’’ for the
obvious reason that a day is different
from a two-week period. And the
number of hours an employee typically
works in a day is an order of magnitude
lower than the number of hours that an
employee typically works in a two-week
period. Thus, an employee who works
a varied schedule would be entitled to
an order of magnitude fewer hours of
paid sick leave than if the employee had
worked a regular schedule. In light of
the FFCRA, the Department can think of
no reason why Congress would penalize
part-time employees who work varied as
opposed to regular schedules.
Rather, the Department believes
Congress intended to use the daily
average to compute the two-week
average. Because there are fourteen
calendar days over a two-week period,
the Department believes Congress
intended for the EPSLA to provide parttime employees whose weekly schedule
varies with paid sick leave equal to
fourteen times the ‘‘number of hours
that the employee was scheduled per
[calendar] day,’’ averaged over the
above-mentioned six-month period. An
employer may also use twice the
number of hours that an employee was
scheduled to work per workweek,
averaged over the six-month period.
The EPSLA does not define what it
means to be a ‘‘full-time’’ or ‘‘part-time’’
employee. Because paid sick leave is
designed to provide leave ‘‘over a 2week period,’’ and the EPSLA provides
up to 80 hours of such leave to full-time
employees, the Department believes a
full-time employee is an employee who
works at least 80 hours over two
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workweeks, or at least 40 hours each
workweek. As a result, the Department
defines a full-time employee as an
employee who is normally scheduled to
work at least 40 hours each workweek
in § 826.21(a)(2). Further, § 826.21(a)(3)
provides that an employee who does not
have a normal weekly schedule may
also be a full-time employee if he or she
is scheduled to work, on average, at
least 40 hours each workweek. For
consistency purposes, this weekly
average should be computed over the
same six-month period as the ‘‘Varying
Schedule Hours Calculation’’ for certain
part-time employees under section
5110(5)(C)(i) of the FFCRA. Thus,
§ 826.21(a)(3) provides that the average
hours per workweek for an employee
who does not have a normal weekly
schedule should be calculated over the
six-months prior to the date on which
leave is requested to determine if he or
she is a full-time employee. If the
employee has been employed for less
than six months, the average hours per
workweek is computed over the entire
period of employment.
Under § 826.21(b), a part-time
employee is an employee who is
normally scheduled to work fewer than
40 hours each workweek or—if the
employee lacks a normal weekly
schedule—who is scheduled to work, on
average, fewer than 40 hours each
workweek. Under § 826.21(b)(1), a parttime employee who works a normal
schedule is entitled to paid sick leave
equal to the number of hours he or she
is normally scheduled to work over a
two-workweek period. As discussed
above, the Department believes that a
part-time employee whose weekly work
schedule varies should be entitled to
paid sick leave equal to fourteen times
the average number of hours that the
employee was scheduled to work per
calendar day over the six-month period
ending on the date on which the
employee takes paid sick leave,
including hours for which the employee
took leave of any type. This
computation is possible only if the
employee has been employed for at least
six months. Thus, § 826.21(b)(2)
provides variable-schedule part-time
employees with such an amount of paid
sick leave.
Section 5110(5)(C)(ii) of the EPSLA
further provides that, if a part-time
employee with a varying weekly
schedule has been employed for fewer
than six months, ‘‘the reasonable
expectation of the employee at the time
of hiring of the average number of hours
per day that the employee would
normally be scheduled to work’’ should
be used ‘‘in place of’’ the average
number of hours worked ‘‘over a 2-week
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19331
period’’ under section 5102(b)(2)(B) to
determine the amount of paid sick leave
to which an employee is entitled. Again,
the Department does not believe that in
the EPSLA Congress intended for ‘‘the
reasonable expectation . . . of the
average number of hours per day’’ to be
used ‘‘in place of’’ the average number
of hours worked ‘‘over a 2-week
period.’’ Rather, Congress intended to
use the expected daily average number
of hours to estimate the two-week
average. The Department further
believes such ‘‘reasonable expectation’’
is best evidenced by an agreement
between the employer and employee at
the time of hiring.
Thus, § 826.21(b)(3) states that a parttime employee with a varying schedule
who has been employed for fewer than
six months is entitled to fourteen times
the expected number of hours the
employee and employer agreed at the
time of hiring that the employee would
work, on average, each calendar day.
This is equal to twice the average
number of hours that the employee
would be expected to work each
workweek. The agreement could have
used any time period—e.g., each
workweek, month, or year—to express
the average number of hours the
employee was expected to work, so long
as that daily average could be
extrapolated. In the absence of such an
agreement, the Department believes that
the actual average number of hours the
employee was scheduled to work each
workday demonstrates ‘‘the reasonable
expectation . . . of the average number
of hours per day that the employee
would normally be scheduled to work.’’
FFCRA section 5110(5)(C)(ii).
Accordingly, § 826.21(b)(3) further
states that, in the absence of an
agreement regarding the expected
number of hours worked each day, a
part-time employee with a varying
schedule who has been employed for
fewer than six months ‘‘is entitled to up
to the number of hours of paid sick
leave equal to fourteen times the average
number of hours per calendar day that
the employee was scheduled to work
over the entire period of employment,
including hours for which the employee
took leave of any type.’’ An employer
may also use twice the number of hours
that an employee was scheduled to
work per workweek, on average, over
the six-month period.
Section 826.22 explains the amount of
pay due to employees who take paid
sick leave. If the employee takes paid
sick leave because he or she is subject
to a Federal, State, or local COVID–19
quarantine or isolation order; has been
advised by a health care provider to selfquarantine for COVID-related reasons;
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or is experiencing COVID–19 symptoms
and seeking a medical diagnosis, the
employer must pay the employee his or
her regular rate of pay (subject to the
qualifications described below) for each
hour of paid sick leave taken. If an
employee takes paid sick leave because
of any other COVID–19 qualifying
reason, the employer must pay the
employee two-thirds of the employee’s
regular rate of pay (subject to the
qualifications described below).
If the employee’s regular rate of pay
is lower than the Federal, State, or local
minimum wage (if applicable to the
employee), the employee should instead
be paid the highest of such amounts.
That means an employee taking paid
sick leave because he or she is subject
to a Federal, State, or local COVID–19
quarantine or isolation order; has been
advised by a health care provider to selfquarantine for COVID-related reasons;
or is experiencing COVID–19 symptoms
and seeking a medical diagnosis must be
paid the highest applicable minimum
wage (federal, state, or local). And, an
employee taking paid sick leave for any
other COVID–19 qualifying reason must
be paid at least two-thirds of the highest
applicable minimum wage.
The amount an employer is required
to pay is capped at $511 per day of paid
sick leave taken and $5,110 in total per
covered employee for all paid sick leave
pay. Furthermore, where an employee is
taking paid sick leave at two-thirds pay,
the amount of pay is subject to a lower
cap of $200 per day of leave and $2,000
in total per covered employee for all
paid sick leave that is paid at two-thirds
pay.
Section 826.23 explains that
expanded family and medical leave is a
type of FMLA leave that is available for
certain eligible employees between
April 1, 2020, and December 31, 2020.
As such, § 826.23(a) explains that an
eligible employee is entitled to up to
twelve workweeks of expanded family
and medical leave, as provided under
section 102 of the FMLA, during that
period. See 29 U.S.C. 2612; see also 29
CFR 825.200. Section 826.23(b) further
clarifies that any time taken by an
eligible employee as expanded family
and medical leave counts towards the
twelve workweeks of FMLA leave to
which the employee is entitled under
section 102 of the FMLA and 29 CFR
825.200. Because the FFCRA amends
the FMLA, and in particular references
Section 102(d)(2)(B) of the FMLA,
§ 826.23 explains that an employee may
elect to use, or an employer may require
an employee to use, accrued leave that
under the employer’s policies would be
available to the employee to care for a
child, such as vacation or personal leave
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or paid time off concurrently with the
expanded family and medical leave
under the EFMLEA. Although Section
102(d)(2)(B) is read broader in the
traditional FMLA context to include
sick and medical leave, the Department
notes that the FMLA is in part a medical
leave, whereas the leave provided under
the FFCRA is solely for care for a family
(i.e., a child whose school or place of
care is closed or whose child care
provider is unavailable). The
Department believes that this flexibility
carries out the purposes of the FFCRA
by allowing employees to receive full
pay during the period for which they
have preexisting accrued vacation or
personal leave or paid time off, and
allowing employers to require
employees to take such leave and
minimize employee absences.
Section 826.24 explains the amount
an employer must pay an employee for
each day of expanded family and
medical leave under the EFMLEA taken
to care for his or her child whose school
or place of care is closed, or whose child
care provider is unavailable, for a
COVID–19 related reason. The payment
requirement under the EFMLEA is
triggered after two weeks that an
employee uses leave for this reason. For
each day of expanded family and
medical leave after the initial two-week
period, the employer must pay an
employee taking such leave two-thirds
of the employee’s regular rate times the
number of hours the employee would
normally be scheduled to work that day,
up to a maximum of $200 per day or
$10,000 in total for the additional ten
workweeks.
Some employees do not have a regular
work schedule. If the employee’s
‘‘schedule varies week to week to such
an extent that an employer is unable to
determine with certainty [that] number
of hours,’’ section 110(b)(2)(C)(i) of the
FMLA, as amended by the EFMLEA,
requires the employer to compute pay
per day of expanded family and medical
leave based on ‘‘the average number of
hours the employee was scheduled per
day over the six-month period ending
on the date on which the employee
takes such leave, including hours for
which the employee took leave of any
type.’’ This six-month average of daily
hours is possible only if the employee
has been employed for at least six
months. The Department does not
believe Congress intended for the
EFMLEA to use this six-month average
only where an employee’s ‘‘schedule
varies week to week,’’ but also where
the schedule varies day to day. This is
because, even if an employee is
scheduled for the same number of hours
each workweek, day-to-day variations
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within each workweek could prevent an
employer from determining the number
of hours an employee would have been
scheduled to work on a particular
workday.2 Thus, § 826.24(b) provides
that the six-month average set forth in
section 110(b)(2)(C) of the FMLA, as
amended by the EFMLEA, is to be used
to compute pay for each day of
expanded family and medical leave
taken where an employee’s work
schedule varies, without a week-to-week
requirement, and has been employed for
at least six months.
For an employee with a varying
schedule of hours who has been
employed for fewer than six months,
section 110(b)(2)(C)(i) of the FMLA, as
amended by the EFMLEA, provides that
‘‘the reasonable expectation of the
employee at the time of hiring of the
average number of hours per day that
the employee would normally be
scheduled to work’’ should be used to
compute the amount of pay for each day
of expanded family and medical leave
he or she takes after the initial unpaid
period. The Department believes such
‘‘reasonable expectation’’ is best
evidenced by an agreement between the
employer and employee at the time of
hiring. Thus, § 826.21(b)(2)(ii) explains
the number of hours per day used to
compute pay for an employee with a
varying schedule who has been
employed for less than six months is
equal to the number of hours that the
employee and the employer agreed at
the time of hiring that the employee
would be expected to work, on average,
each workday. The agreement could
have expressed the average number of
hours over any time period—e.g., each
week, month, or year—so long as that
daily average could be extrapolated. In
the absence of such an agreement, the
Department believes that the actual
average number of hours the employee
was scheduled to work each workday
evinces ‘‘the reasonable expectation
. . . of the average number of hours per
day that the employee would normally
be scheduled to work.’’ Accordingly,
§ 826.21(b)(2)(ii) further states that, in
the absence of an agreement regarding
the expected number of hours worked
each day, the employer should use ‘‘the
average number of hours per workday
that the employee was scheduled to
work over the entire period of
employment, including hours for which
the employee took leave of any type’’ to
compute the amount of pay for an
employee with a varying schedule who
2 For instance, an employee may always work 40
hours each workweek, but on some weeks the
employee works five eight-hour shifts and on other
weeks he or she works four ten-hour shifts.
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has been employed for fewer than six
months.
The Department recognizes that the
two-week initial unpaid period of
expanded family and medical leave
under § 826.60 is different from the tenday unpaid period set forth in section
110(b)(1)(A) of the FMLA, as amended
by the EFMLEA. This deviation is
necessary to ensure that expanded
family and medical leave provided
under the EFMLEA and paid sick leave
provided under the EPSLA work
together—as Congress intended—to
permit an employee to have a
continuous income stream while taking
FFCRA paid leave to care for his or her
child whose school or place of care is
closed, or whose child care provider is
unavailable, for a COVID–19 related
reason.
The EFMLEA provides that, during
the unpaid period of expanded family
and medical leave, an employee may
receive pay by using other paid leave to
which he or she may be entitled,
including paid sick leave provided by
the EPSLA. Paid sick leave may be used
for the same reason as expanded family
and medical leave, i.e., to care for a
child whose school or place of care is
closed, or whose child care provider is
unavailable, for a COVID–19 related
reason. And the amount of pay per hour
of paid sick leave is guaranteed to be at
least as much as the amount of pay per
hour for paid expanded family and
medical leave, i.e., two-thirds of the
employee’s regular rate, up to $200 per
day. Furthermore, the entitlement to
paid sick leave of an employee with a
regular work schedule, i.e., eight hours
each day for five days for a total of 40
hours each workweek—is the same as
the ten-day period of unpaid expanded
family and medical leave. Such an
employee is entitled to 80 hours of paid
sick leave, which provides pay at twothirds of the employee’s regular rate, as
defined in § 826.25, for ten workdays. If
the employee were concurrently taking
expanded family and medical leave, he
or she would be able to take paid
expanded family and medical leave at
two-thirds the regular rate as soon as the
80 hours of paid sick leave runs out.
Thus, paid sick leave and expanded
family and medical leave are designed
to work in tandem to provide
continuous income for an employee to
care for his or her child whose school
or place of care is closed, or whose child
care provider is unavailable, for a
COVID–19 related reason. Put another
way, the reason for an unpaid initial
period of expanded family and medical
leave is because an eligible employee
already may concurrently use paid sick
leave for the same reason and get paid
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at the same rate. The unpaid period is
therefore intended to ensure that the
employee has sufficient leave for a
constant stream of income at two-thirds
the regular rate, up to $200 per day,
while taking care of his or her child, but
not more paid leave than necessary for
that purpose.
As explained above, a ten-day period
of unpaid expanded family and medical
leave satisfies these purposes for an
employee who works a regular 40-hour
week. But the twin purposes of
providing sufficient, yet not excessive,
paid leave are not satisfied with respect
to employees who work unconventional
hours. For instance, consider an
employee who works twelve hours each
day for three days each workweek, or a
total of 36 hours each workweek. This
employee would be entitled to 72 hours
of paid sick leave under the EPSLA to
care for his or her child, which lasts for
two workweeks. The employee,
however, would not be able to take paid
expanded family and medical leave at
the end of two workweeks time because
he would have taken only six workdays
of such leave, and the ten-day period of
unpaid leave would still be in effect. In
order to have a continuous income
stream until the ten-day unpaid period
of expanded family and medical leave
expired, the employee would need an
additional 48 hours of paid sick leave.
As another example, consider a
second employee who works six hours
each day for six days each workweek,
also for a total of 36 hours each
workweek. The second employee would
likewise be entitled to 72 hours of paid
sick leave under the EPSLA to care for
his or her child, which lasts for two
workweeks or twelve workdays. The
period of unpaid expanded family and
medical leave would expire after ten
workdays—two workdays before the
second employee runs out of paid sick
leave. The second employee may
transition from paid sick leave to
expanded family and medical leave after
ten workdays, leaving two days of paid
sick leave unused. In other words, the
second employee would have two more
days of paid leave than necessary to
have a continuous income stream at
two-thirds the regular rate while caring
for his or her child.
In short, there is inconsistency
between the provisions for expanded
family and medical leave under the
EFMLEA and paid sick leave under the
EPSLA with respect to the first
employee because he or she would be
48 hours short of being able to have
continuous income. And there is
inconsistency between the two Acts
with respect to the second employee
because he or she would have more
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hours of leave than needed for that
purpose. Accordingly, pursuant to the
Secretary’s authority to issue regulations
‘‘to ensure consistency’’ between the
two types of paid leave under the
FFCRA, § 826.24 states that the unpaid
period for expanded family and medical
leave lasts for two weeks rather than ten
days.3
In subsection (d), we made clear that
despite the cap on pay, an employee
may elect to use, or an employer may
require that an employee take leave
under the employer’s policies that
would be available to the employee to
care for a child, such as vacation or
personal leave or paid time off,
concurrently with expanded family and
medical leave, and the employer must
pay the employee a full day’s pay for
that day.
Section 826.25 explains how to
calculate the regular rate that is used to
determine the amount an employer
must pay an eligible employee who
takes paid sick leave or expanded family
and medical leave (after the initial twoweek unpaid period). An employee’s
regular rate is computed for each
workweek as defined under section 7(e)
of the FLSA, as ‘‘all [non-overtime]
remuneration for employment’’ paid to
the employee except for eight statutory
exclusions, divided by the number of
hours worked in that workweek. See 29
U.S.C. 207(e); see also Bay Ridge
Operating Co. v. Aaron, 334 U.S. 446,
458 (1948) (stating that the ‘‘regular rate
must be computed by dividing the total
number of hours worked into the total
[non-overtime] compensation
received’’).
The Department’s regulations at 29
CFR parts 531 and 778 explain how to
calculate the regular rate in different
circumstances. For example, the
Department uses the computation of an
employee’s regular rate with respect to
tips in § 531.60. Moreover, the
Department clarifies how to compute an
employee’s regular rate under different
compensation arrangements, including
commissions and piece rates, at
§§ 778.110–.122, and explains what
types of compensation are excludable
from the regular rate, at §§ 778.200–
.225. The regular rate used to determine
the amount of pay due an employee
who takes paid sick leave or expanded
family and medical leave must be
computed using the same methods as
those described in 29 CFR parts 531 and
778.
3 As a practical matter, the unpaid period for
employees who work regular Monday-throughFriday schedules would still be ten days because
that is the number of days they would work in two
weeks.
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The regular rate must also be
computed on a workweek to workweek
basis. See, e.g., § 778.104 (‘‘Each
workweek stands alone’’). Neither the
EPSLA nor the EFMLEA, however,
explains which workweek should be
used to compute the regular rate that is
the basis for determining the amount of
pay for leave taken. The Department
does not believe it would be appropriate
to use the workweek in which an
employee takes leave because an
employee’s hours worked, and therefore
regular rate, in such a workweek is
unlikely to be representative. Indeed, if
the employee takes leave for the entire
workweek, the regular rate would equal
zero.
Instead, the Department believes the
regular rate used to determine the
amount of pay under the EPSLA and the
EFMLEA should be representative of the
employee’s regular rate from week to
week. Section 826.25 therefore requires
an employer to use an average of the
employee’s regular rate over multiple
workweeks.4 Such an average should be
weighted by the number of hours
worked each workweek. For example,
consider an employee who receives
$400 of non-excludable compensation
in one week for working 40 hours and
$200 of non-excludable compensation
in the next week for working ten hours.
The regular rate in the first week is $10
per hour ($400 ÷ 40 hours), and the
regular rate for the second week is $20
per hour ($200 ÷ 10 hours). The
weighted average, however, is not
computed by averaging $10 per hour
and $20 per hour (which would be $15
per hour). Rather, it is computed by
adding up all compensation over the
relevant period (here, two workweeks),
which is $600, and then dividing that
sum by all hours worked over the same
period, which is 50 hours. Thus, the
weighted average regular rate over this
two-week period is $12 per hour ($600
÷ 50 hours).
To be representative, the period over
which the regular rate is averaged
should be substantially greater than the
two workweeks used in the above
example. The Department believes it
would be appropriate to compute the
average regular rate over the same
period used by the EPSLA and the
EFMLEA to compute the employee’s
average number of hours worked per
4 The Department notes that § 778.104 states that
the FLSA ‘‘does not permit averaging of hours over
2 or more weeks’’ for the purpose of computing the
regular rate. But this prohibition against averaging
applies when the regular rate is used for its purpose
under the FLSA to compute overtime pay due. It
does not apply when, as here, the regular rate is
used as a metric for an employee’s average hourly
non-overtime wages.
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day, i.e., a six-month period ending on
the date on which the employee first
takes paid sick leave or expanded family
and medical leave. The Department has
selected this six-month period because
it is sufficiently representative under
both the EPSLA and the EFMLEA. And
it minimizes regulatory burden by
allowing employers to use the same
payroll and schedule records to
compute both an employee’s average
number of hours worked per day and
average regular rate. Of course,
computing an average regular rate used
to determine the amount of pay should
be computed over a six-month period is
not possible if the employee at issue has
not been employed for at least six
months. In such a case, the average
regular rate should be computed over
the entire term of the employment.
C. Employee Eligibility for Leave Under
the EPSLA and the EFMLEA
Section 826.30 sets out the criteria for
an employee’s eligibility to receive paid
sick leave under the EPSLA and/or
expanded family and medical leave
under the EFMLEA, which have similar,
but not identical, eligibility
requirements for leave. This section also
addresses when employers may elect to
exclude certain otherwise-eligible
employees from coverage under these
Acts.
Sections 826.30(a) and (b) provide
that all employees employed by a
covered employer are eligible to take
paid sick leave under the EPSLA
regardless of their duration of
employment, and all employees who
have been employed by a covered
employer for at least thirty calendar
days are eligible to take expanded
family and medical leave under the
EFMLEA, subject to the exceptions
described in §§ 826.30(c)–(d) and .40(b).
Section 826.30(b)(1)(i) further
explains that an employee is considered
to have been employed for at least thirty
calendar days for purposes of EFMLEA
eligibility if the employer had the
employee on its payroll for the thirty
calendar days immediately prior to the
day that the employee’s leave would
begin. For example, for an employee to
be eligible to take leave under the
EFMLEA on April 1, 2020, the employee
must have been on the employer’s
payroll as of March 2, 2020. Section
826.30(b)(1)(ii) provides that an
employee who is laid off or otherwise
terminated by an employer on or after
March 1, 2020, is nevertheless also
considered to have been employed for at
least thirty calendar days, provided the
employer rehires or otherwise
reemploys the employee on or before
December 31, 2020, and the employee
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had been on the employer’s payroll for
thirty or more of the sixty calendar days
prior to the date the employee was laid
off or otherwise terminated. ‘‘For
example, an employee who was
originally hired by an employer on
January 15, 2020, but laid off on March
14, 2020, would be eligible for leave
under the EFMLEA and the EPSLA, if
the same employer rehired the
employee on October 1, 2020.’’
The EFMLEA and the EPSLA both
provide that an employer may exclude
employees who are health care
providers or emergency responders from
leave requirements under the Acts.
Section 826.30(c) reiterates this option
and defines which employees are
‘‘health care providers’’ or ‘‘emergency
responders’’ whom employers may
exclude from eligibility for the EPSLA
and the EFMLEA’s leave requirements.
An employer’s exercise of this option
does not impact an employee’s earned
or accrued sick, personal, vacation, or
other employer-provided leave under
the employer’s established policies.
Further, an employer’s exercise of this
option does not authorize an employer
to prevent an employee who is a health
care provider or emergency responder
from taking earned or accrued leave in
accordance with established employer
policies. Because an employer is not
required to exercise this option, if an
employer does not elect to exclude an
otherwise-eligible health care provider
or emergency responder from taking
paid leave under the EPSLA or the
EFMLEA, such leave is subject to all
other requirements of those laws and
this Part, and should be treated in the
same manner for purposes of the tax
credit created by the FFCRA. To
minimize the spread of COVID–19, the
Department encourages employers to be
judicious when using this definition to
exempt health care providers and
emergency responders from the
provisions of the FFCRA.
The Department recognizes that
health care providers whom an
employer may exempt pursuant to
sections 3105 and 5102(a) of the FFCRA
is broader than the definition of health
care provider under 29 CFR 825.102.
Section 5110(4) of the FFCRA adopts
the FMLA definition of ‘‘health care
providers,’’ which includes licensed
doctors of medicine or osteopathy and
‘‘any other person determined by the
Secretary to be capable of providing
health care services.’’ 29 U.S.C. 2611(6).
The Department defined ‘‘health care
provider’’ narrowly in § 825.102 to
mean medical professionals who are
capable of diagnosing serious health
conditions in light of the FMLA’s
requirement for such health care
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providers to issue certifications
regarding the nature and probable
duration of serious health conditions.
See 29 U.S.C. 2613; see also 58 FR
31800 (‘‘Because health care providers
will need to indicate their diagnosis in
health care certificates, such a broad
definition was considered
inappropriate.’’).
The term ‘‘health care provider’’ as
used in sections 3105 and 5102(a) of the
FFCRA, however, is not limited to
diagnosing medical professionals.
Rather, such health care providers
include any individual who is capable
of providing health care services
necessary to combat the COVID–19
public health emergency. Such
individuals include not only medical
professionals, but also other workers
who are needed to keep hospitals and
similar health care facilities well
supplied and operational. They further
include, for example, workers who are
involved in research, development, and
production of equipment, drugs,
vaccines, and other items needed to
combat the COVID–19 public health
emergency. Accordingly, the
Department is adopting a definition of
‘‘health care provider’’ that is broader
than the diagnosing medical
professionals under § 825.102 for the
limited purpose of identifying
employees whom an employer may
exclude under sections 3105 and
5102(a) of the FFCRA. The definition of
health care provider under § 825.102
continues to apply for other purposes of
the FFCRA, such as, for instance,
identifying health care providers who
may advise an employee to selfquarantine for COVID–19 related
reasons under section 5102(a)(2).
The authority for employers to
exempt emergency responders is
reflective of a balance struck by the
FFCRA. On the one hand, the FFCRA
provides for paid sick leave and
expanded family and medical leave so
employees will not be forced to choose
between their paychecks and the
individual and public health measures
necessary to combat COVID–19. On the
other hand, providing paid sick leave or
expanded family and medical leave
does not come at the expense of fully
staffing the necessary functions of
society, including the functions of
emergency responders. The FFRCA
should be read to complement—and not
detract from—the work being done on
the front lines to treat COVID–19
patients, prevent the spread of COVID–
19, and simultaneously keep Americans
safe and with access to essential
services. Therefore, the Department
interprets ‘‘emergency responder’’
broadly.
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The specific parameters of the
Department’s definition of ‘‘emergency
responder’’ derive from consultation of
various statutory and regulatory
definitions and from the consideration
of input provided to the Department by
various stakeholders and public
officials. The Department endeavored to
include those categories of employees
who (1) interact with and aid
individuals with physical or mental
health issues, including those who are
or may be suffering from COVID–19; (2)
ensure the welfare and safety of our
communities and of our Nation; (3) have
specialized training relevant to
emergency response; and (4) provide
essential services relevant to the
American people’s health and
wellbeing. While the Department
endeavored to identify these categories
of workers, it was cognizant that no list
could be fully inclusive or account for
the differing needs of specific
communities. Therefore, the definition
allows for the highest official of a state
or territory to identify other categories
of emergency responders, as necessary.
Section 826.30(d) explains that the
CARES Act grants authority to the
Director of OMB to exclude, for good
cause, certain federal government
employers from eligibility to take paid
sick leave or expanded family and
medical leave. As to the EFMLEA, the
Director of OMB may exclude certain
categories of United States Executive
Branch employees from expanded
family and medical leave. As to the
EPSLA, the Director of OMB may
exclude certain categories of federal
government employees if they are
covered by Title II of the FMLA, occupy
a position in the civil service (as defined
in 5 U.S.C. 2101(1)), and/or are
employees of a United States Executive
Agency (as defined in 5 U.S.C. 105),
which includes employees of the U.S.
Postal Service and the U.S. Postal and
Regulatory Commission.
D. Employer Coverage Under the EPSLA
and the EFMLEA
Section 826.40 addresses which
employers are covered by the EPSLA
and the EFMLEA, that is, which
employers must provide paid leave to
employees as described in those Acts.
Section 826.40(a) explains which
private employers must provide paid
sick leave and expanded family and
medical leave to their employees.
Specifically, it explains that, subject to
the exemption described in § 826.40(b),
all private employers that employ fewer
than 500 employees at the time an
employee would take leave must
comply with the EPSLA and the
EFMLEA.
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This determination is dependent on
the number of employees at the time an
employee would take leave. For
example, if an employer has 450
employees on April 20, 2020, and an
employee is unable to work starting on
that date because a health care provider
has advised that employee to selfquarantine because of concerns related
to COVID–19, the employer must
provide paid sick leave to that
employee. If, however, the employer
hires 75 new employees between April
21, 2020, and August 3, 2020, such that
the employer employs 525 employees as
of August 3, 2020, the employer would
not be required to provide paid sick
leave to a different employee who is
unable to work for the same reason
beginning on August 3, 2020.
Section 826.40(a) also addresses how
to determine who counts as an
employee for this purpose, including
discussing categories of workers who do
(and do not) count toward the 500employee threshold. In making this
determination, the employer should
include full-time and part-time
employees, employees on leave,
temporary employees who are jointly
employed by the employer and another
employer, and day laborers supplied by
a temporary placement agency.
Independent contractors that provide
services for an employer do not count
towards the 500-employee threshold.
Nor do employees count who have been
laid off or furloughed and have not
subsequently been reemployed.
Furthermore, employees must be
employed within the United States. For
example, if an employer employs 1,000
employees in North America, but only
250 are employed in a U.S. State, the
District of Columbia, or a territory or
possession of the United States, that
employer will be considered to have 250
employees and is thus subject to the
FFCRA.
Section 826.40(a) further explains that
joint or integrated employers must
combine employees in determining the
number of employees they employ for
this purpose. The FLSA’s test for joint
employer status applies in determining
who is a joint employer for purposes of
coverage, and the FMLA’s test for
integrated employer status applies in
determining who is an integrated
employer, under both the EPSLA and
the EFMLEA.
Section 826.40(a) does not distinguish
between for-profit and non-profit
entities; employers of both types must
comply with the FFCRA if they
otherwise meet the requirements for
coverage.
Section 826.40(b) describes the small
employer exemption pursuant to the
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Secretary’s regulatory authority to
exempt small private employers with
fewer than 50 employees from having to
provide an employee with paid sick
leave and expanded family and medical
leave to care for his or her child whose
school or place of care is closed, or
child care provider is unavailable, when
such leave would jeopardize the
viability of the business as a going
concern. The American Institute of
Certified Public Accountants (AICPA)
allows companies to use the ‘‘ongoing
concern assumption’’ to defer some of
its prepaid expenses until future
accounting periods because the entity
can continue in business for the
foreseeable future without the intention
nor the necessity to liquidate, cease
trading, or seek protection from
creditors pursuant to laws or
regulations. In other words, the business
is considered to remain a viable
business for the foreseeable future.
There is no formula provided by the
AICPA to determine the viability of a
business as a going concern, but rather
the standard considers conditions or
events in the aggregate.
The Department believes it is
necessary to set forth objective criteria
for when a small business with fewer
than 50 employees can deny an
employee paid sick leave or expanded
family and medical leave to care for the
employee’s son or daughter whose
school or place of care is closed, or
child care provider is unavailable, for
COVID–19 related reasons. To that end,
section 826.40(b)(1) explains that a
small employer is exempt from the
requirement to provide such leave
when: (1) Such leave would cause the
small employer’s expenses and financial
obligations to exceed available business
revenue and cause the small employer
to cease operating at a minimal capacity;
(2) the absence of the employee or
employees requesting such leave would
pose a substantial risk to the financial
health or operational capacity of the
small employer because of their
specialized skills, knowledge of the
business, or responsibilities; or (3) the
small employer cannot find enough
other workers who are able, willing, and
qualified, and who will be available at
the time and place needed, to perform
the labor or services the employee or
employees requesting leave provide,
and these labor or services are needed
for the small employer to operate at a
minimal capacity. For reasons (1), (2),
and (3), the employer may deny paid
sick leave or expanded family and
medical leave only to those otherwise
eligible employees whose absence
would cause the small employer’s
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expenses and financial obligations to
exceed available business revenue, pose
a substantial risk, or prevent the small
employer from operating at minimum
capacity, respectively.
Section 826.40(b)(2) explains that if a
small employer decides to deny paid
sick leave or expanded family and
medical leave to an employee or
employees whose child’s school or
place of care is closed, or whose child
care provider is unavailable, the small
employer must document the facts and
circumstances that meet the criteria set
forth in § 826.40(b)(1) to justify such
denial. The employer should not send
such material or documentation to the
Department, but rather should retain
such records for its own files.
In exercising its authority to exempt
certain employers with fewer than 50
employees, the Department balanced
two potentially competing objectives of
the FFCRA. On the one hand, the leave
afforded by the FFCRA was designed to
be widely available to employees to
assist them navigating the social and
economic impacts of COVID–19 as well
as public and private efforts to contain
and slow the spread of the virus. On the
other hand, the Department recognizes
that FFCRA leave entitlements have
little value if they cause an employer to
go out of business and, in so doing,
deny employees not only leave but also
jobs. In § 826.40(b), the Department
attempted to extend the leave benefits as
broadly as practicable, but not in
circumstances that would significantly
increase the likelihood that small
businesses would be forced to close.
The Department rejected alternative
arrangements that excessively favored
either the extension of leave or
exclusion of small businesses or which
imposed compliance requirements that
were overly burdensome, particularly in
economic conditions resulting from
COVID–19.
Section 826.40(c) explains which
public employers must comply with the
EPSLA and the EFMLEA. It uses the
term ‘‘Public Agency,’’ which as
explained in the definitions section, has
the same meaning as in section 203(x)
of the FLSA. Specifically, public agency
means the Government of the United
States; the government of a State or
political subdivision of a State; or an
agency of the United States (including
the United States Postal Service and
Postal Regulatory Commission), a State,
or a political subdivision of a State; or
any interstate governmental agency. All
covered public agencies must comply
with both the EPSLA and the EFMLEA
regardless of the number of employees
they employ, although such employers
may exclude employees who are health
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care providers or emergency responders
as described in § 826.30(c).
Section 826.40(c) provides further
information about which parts of the
Federal government must comply with
these Acts. Because the EFMLEA only
amends Title I of the FMLA, only
employers of employees covered by
Title I of the FMLA are subject to the
requirements of the EFMLEA.
Employers of federal employees covered
by Title II of the FMLA are not subject
to requirements of the EFMLEA.
Section 826.40(c) provides certain
clarifications as to the EPSLA’s and the
EFMLEA’s applicability to public
employers. It explains that all public
agencies must provide their eligible
employees with paid sick leave, subject
to the exceptions set forth in
§ 826.30(c)–(d). In general, public
agencies must also provide their eligible
employees with expanded family and
medical leave, subject to the exceptions
and limitations set forth in § 826.30(b)–
(d). However, as § 826.40(c) clarifies,
only certain employees of the United
States or agencies of the United States
(‘‘federal employees’’) are potentially
eligible to take expanded family and
medical leave. Those who are
potentially eligible are the federal
employees covered by Title I of the
FMLA. Those who are not potentially
eligible for expanded family and
medical leave are the federal employees
whose FMLA coverage is found
elsewhere, including in Title II of the
FMLA (codified in Title 5 of the U.S.
Code). Section 826.40(c)(i)–(viii) sets
forth specific examples of federal
employees covered by Title I of the
FMLA and therefore potentially eligible
for expanded family and medical leave.
E. Intermittent Leave
Section 826.50 outlines the
circumstances and conditions under
which paid sick leave or expanded
family and medical leave may be taken
intermittently under the FFCRA. In this
section, the Department has imported
and applied to the FFCRA certain
concepts of intermittent leave from its
FMLA regulations. However, it has also
modified these concepts and added
additional limitations on the use of
intermittent leave in circumstances
where the Department believes it is
incompatible with Congress’ objectives
to slow the spread of COVID–19.
One basic condition applies to all
employees who seek to take their paid
sick leave or expanded family and
medical leave intermittently—they and
their employer must agree. Absent
agreement, no leave under the FFCRA
may be taken intermittently. Subsection
(a) does not require an employer and
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employee to reduce to writing or
similarly memorialize their agreement.
But, in the absence of a written
agreement, there must be a clear and
mutual understanding between the
parties that the employee may take
intermittent paid sick leave or
intermittent expanded family and
medical leave, or both. Additionally,
where an employer and employee agree
that the latter may take paid sick leave
or expanded family and medical leave
intermittently, they also must agree on
the increments of time in which leave
may be taken, as explained in
subsections (b)(1) and (c).
Section 826.50(c) provides that if an
employer directs or allows an employee
to telework, subject to an agreement
between the employer and employee,
the employee may take paid sick leave
or expanded family and medical leave
intermittently, in any agreed increment
of time, while the employee is
teleworking. This section intentionally
affords teleworking employees and
employers broad flexibility under the
FFCRA to agree on arrangements that
balance the needs of each teleworking
employee with the needs of the
employer’s business. Moreover, as
teleworking employees present no risk
of spreading COVID–19 to work
colleagues, intermittent leave for any
qualifying reason furthers the statute’s
objective to contain the virus.
In contrast, employees who continue
to report to an employer’s worksite may
only take paid sick leave or expanded
family and medical leave intermittently
and in any increment—subject to the
employer and employee’s agreement—
in circumstances where there is a
minimal risk that the employee will
spread COVID–19 to other employees at
an employer’s worksite. Therefore,
subsection (b)(1) allows an employer
and employee who reports to an
employer’s worksite to agree that the
employee may take paid sick leave or
expanded family and medical leave
intermittently solely to care for the
employee’s son or daughter whose
school or place of care is closed, or
whose child care provider is
unavailable, because of reasons related
to COVID–19. In this context, the
absence of confirmed or suspected
COVID–19 in the employee’s household
reduces the risk that the employee will
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spread COVID–19 by reporting to the
employer’s worksite while taking
intermittent paid leave. This is not true,
however, when the employee takes paid
sick leave for other qualifying reasons.
Subsection (b)(2) prohibits employees
who report to an employer’s worksite
from taking paid sick leave
intermittently, notwithstanding any
agreement between the employer and
employee to the contrary, if the leave is
taken because the employee: (1) Is
subject to a Federal, State, or local
quarantine or isolation order related to
COVID–19; (2) has been advised by a
health care provider to self-quarantine
due to concerns related to COVID–19;
(3) is experiencing symptoms of
COVID–19 and is taking leave to obtain
a medical diagnosis; (4) is caring for an
individual who either is subject to a
quarantine or isolation order related to
COVID–19 or has been advised by a
health care provider to self-quarantine
due to concerns related to COVID–19; or
(5) is experiencing any other
substantially similar condition specified
by the Secretary of Health and Human
Services. As the Department explains in
subsection (b)(2), where paid leave is
taken for these reasons, ‘‘the employee
is, may be, or is reasonably likely to
become, sick with COVID–19, or is
exposed to someone who is, may be, or
is reasonably likely to become, sick with
COVID–19.’’ In these situations, the
employee may not take intermittent
leave due to the unacceptably high risk
that the employee might spread COVID–
19 to other employees when reporting to
the employer’s worksite. Once such an
employee begins taking paid sick leave
for one or more of these qualifying
reasons, the employee must continue to
take paid sick leave each day until the
employee either uses the full amount of
paid sick leave or no longer has a
qualifying reason for taking paid sick
leave. The Department believes that
such a requirement furthers Congress’
objective to slow the spread of COVID–
19.
Finally, subsection (d) clarifies that
where an employer and employee have
agreed that FFCRA leave may be taken
intermittently, only the amount of leave
actually taken may be counted toward
the employee’s leave entitlements. This
is consistent with the requirements for
intermittent leave use under the FMLA
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and ensures that employees are able to
use the full leave entitlement.
F. Leave To Care for a Child Due to
School or Place of Care Closure or Child
Care Unavailability—Intersection
Between the EPSLA and the EFMLEA
Both the EPSLA and the EFMLEA
permit an employee to take paid leave
when needed to care for his or her son
or daughter whose school or place of
care is closed, or child care provider is
unavailable, due to COVID–19 related
reasons. Section 826.60 sets forth how
the requirements of the EFMLEA and
the EPSLA interact when an employee
qualifies for both types of leave.
Generally, when an employee
qualifies for leave under both Acts, an
employee may first use the two weeks
of paid leave provided by the EPSLA.
This use runs concurrent with the first
two weeks of unpaid leave under the
EFMLEA. Any remaining leave taken for
this purpose is paid under the EFMLEA.
Section 826.60 further explains that
where an employee has already taken
some FMLA leave in the current twelvemonth leave year as defined by 29 CFR
825.200(b), the maximum twelve weeks
of EFMLEA leave is reduced by the
amount of the FMLA leave entitlement
taken in that year. If an employee has
exhausted his or her twelve workweeks
of FMLA or EFMLEA leave, he or she
may still take EPSLA leave for a
COVID–19 qualifying reason.
Section 826.60(b) addresses an
employee’s prior use of emergency paid
sick leave, which does not prevent the
employee from taking expanded family
and medical leave. For example, if the
employee takes two weeks of paid sick
leave for a qualifying reason under
EPSLA section 5102(a)(1)–(4) and (6),
the employee has exhausted the paid
sick leave available to the employee
under the EPSLA and may not take
additional paid sick leave for any
qualifying reason. If the employee then
needs to take leave under the EFMLEA,
the employee may do so, but the first
ten days of expanded family and
medical leave may be unpaid. The
employee may, however, choose to
substitute earned or accrued paid leave,
as provided by the employer’s
established policies.
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G. Leave To Care for a Child Due to
School or Place of Care Closure or Child
Care Unavailability—Intersection
Between the EFMLEA and the FMLA
Section 826.70 addresses the
interaction between the new entitlement
to take FMLA leave to care for an
employee’s child due to school or place
of care closure or child care
unavailability under the EFMLEA and
an employee’s entitlement to take FMLA
leave for other reasons, such as bonding
with a newborn or newly placed child,
for the employee’s own serious health
condition, or to care for a covered
family member with a serious health
condition. The EFMLEA amended the
FMLA to add a sixth reason to take the
twelve-week FMLA entitlement: To care
for an employee’s son or daughter
whose school or place of care is closed
or child care provider is unavailable due
to COVID–19 related reasons.
Eligibility requirements for employees
to take expanded family and medical
leave under the EFMLEA differ from
standard FMLA leave. Not all
employees who are eligible to take
expanded family and medical leave will
be eligible to take FMLA leave for other
reasons. Employees only need to have
been employed for 30 calendar days in
order to be eligible for expanded family
and medical leave to care for their child
due to school or place of care closure or
child care unavailability under the
EFMLEA. In contrast, to be eligible to
take FMLA leave for other reasons,
employees generally need to have
worked for the employer for at least
twelve months, have 1,250 hours of
service in the twelve-month period prior
to the leave, and work at a location
where the employer has at least 50
employees within 75 miles.
Employer coverage also differs under
the EFMLEA and the FMLA. Most
significantly, the EFMLEA applies to all
employers with fewer than 500
employees, while the FMLA generally
does not apply to employers with fewer
than 50 employees. Further, employers
of health care providers and emergency
responders may exclude such
employees from the EFMLEA’s leave
requirements, but not the FMLA’s.
An employee’s ability to take
EFMLEA leave depends on his or her
use of FMLA leave during the 12-month
FMLA leave year pursuant to 29 CFR
825.200(b) for a reason unrelated to
COVID–19. If an employee has already
taken such leave, the employee may not
be able to take the full twelve weeks of
expanded family and medical leave
under the EFMLEA. For example, if the
employer uses the calendar year as the
twelve-month FMLA leave year and an
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employee took three weeks of leave in
January 2020 for the employee’s own
serious health condition, the employee
would only have nine weeks of
expanded family and medical leave
available. Additionally, employees are
limited to a total of twelve weeks of
expanded family and medical leave
under the EFMLEA, even if the
applicable time period (April 1 to
December 31, 2020) spans two twelvemonth leave periods under the FMLA.
Finally, for employees who are eligible
to take leave under the FMLA and the
EFMLEA, and who take leave to care for
a service member with a serious injury
or illness, the total amount of leave
available to the employee will be
calculated as set forth in 29 CFR
825.127(e).
As explained in the above discussion
of § 826.60, the first two weeks of
expanded family and medical leave may
be unpaid and the employee may
substitute paid sick leave under the
EPSLA or employer-provided earned
and accrued paid leave during this
period. After the first two weeks of
leave, expanded family and medical
leave is paid at two-thirds the
employee’s regular rate of pay, up to
$200 per day. See § 826.24. Because this
period of expanded family and medical
leave is paid, the FMLA provision for
substitution of the employee’s accrued
paid leave is inapplicable, and neither
the employee nor the employer may
require the substitution of paid leave.
However, employers and employees
may agree, where Federal or state law
permits, to have accrued paid leave
supplement the two-thirds pay under
the EFMLEA so that the employee
receives the full amount of their normal
pay. Federal agencies generally lack
authority to provide for such a
supplement.
H. Employer Notice
Section 826.80 addresses the FFCRA
requirement that employers post and
keep posted a notice of the law’s
requirements. As required by the
FFCRA, the Department made a model
notice available on March 25, 2020, and
employers may, free of charge,
download the poster (WHD1422 REV
03/20) from the WHD website at https://
www.dol.gov/whd. In addition to
posting the notice in a conspicuous
place where employees or job applicants
at a worksite may view it, an employer
may distribute the notice to employees
by email, or post the required notice
electronically on an employee
information website to satisfy the
FFCRA requirement. An employer may
also directly mail the required notice to
any employees who are not able to
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access information at the worksite,
through email, or online. An employer
may post or distribute the required
information provided in the model
notice in a different format, as long as
the content is accurate and readable.
Although the FFCRA does not require
employers to provide a translated notice
to employees, the Department has
issued a Spanish language version of the
poster. For employers who are covered
by the EFMLEA but are not covered by
the other provisions of the FMLA,
posting of this FFCRA notice satisfies
their FMLA general notice obligation.
See 29 U.S.C. 2619; 29 CFR 825.300.
The Department is aware that
employers newly affected by the
EFMLEA requirements of the FFCRA
will not have established policies and
practices for administering FMLA leave.
In consideration of these employers, the
number of employees who will be
eligible to use the FMLA for the first
time for a limited period of time, and
interruptions to normal business
operations from emergency conditions,
the Department did not adopt in the
FFCRA employer notice regulations or
employer ‘‘specific notice’’ obligations
that are required in the FMLA
regulations. The FFCRA regulations do
not require employers to respond to
employees who request or use EFMLEA
leave with notices of eligibility, rights
and responsibilities, or written
designations that leave use counts
against employees’ FMLA leave
allowances. However, an employer that
has established practices for providing
individual employees with specific
notices compliant with the FMLA
regulatory guidance at 29 CFR 825.300
may prefer to apply their existing
practices to EFMLEA leave users.
I. Employee Notice of Need for Leave
Section 826.90 addresses an
employee’s notice to his or her
employer regarding the need to take
leave. Section 826.90(a) explains that for
paid sick leave or expanded family and
medical leave to care for the employee’s
son or daughter whose school or place
of care is closed, or whose child care
provider is unavailable, due to COVID–
19 related reasons, an employer may
require employees to follow reasonable
notice procedures as soon as practicable
after the first workday or portion of a
workday for which an employee
receives paid sick leave in order to
continue to receive such leave. Sections
826.90(b) and (c) explain that it will be
reasonable for an employer to require
notice as soon as practicable after the
first workday is missed, and to require
that employees provide oral notice and
sufficient information for an employer
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to determine whether the requested
leave is covered by the FFCRA. The
employer may not require the notice to
include documentation beyond what is
allowed by § 826.100.
Section 826.90(d) states that it is
reasonable for the employer to require
the employee to comply with the
employer’s usual notice procedures and
requirements, absent unusual
circumstances. If an employee fails to
give proper notice, the employer should
give him or her notice of the failure and
an opportunity to provide the required
documentation prior to denying the
request for leave.
J. Documentation of Need for Leave
An employee must provide his or her
employer documentation in support of
paid sick leave or expanded family and
medical leave. As provided in § 826.100,
such documentation must include a
signed statement containing the
following information: (1) The
employee’s name; (2) the date(s) for
which leave is requested; (3) the
COVID–19 qualifying reason for leave;
and (4) a statement representing that the
employee is unable to work or telework
because of the COVID–19 qualifying
reason.
An employee must provide additional
documentation depending on the
COVID–19 qualifying reason for leave.
An employee requesting paid sick leave
under § 826.20(a)(1)(i) must provide the
name of the government entity that
issued the quarantine or isolation order
to which the employee is subject. An
employee requesting paid sick leave
under § 826.20(a)(1)(ii) must provide the
name of the health care provider who
advised him or her to self-quarantine for
COVID–19 related reasons. An
employee requesting paid sick leave
under § 826.20(a)(1)(iv) to care for an
individual must provide either (1) the
government entity that issued the
quarantine or isolation order to which
the individual is subject or (2) the name
of the health care provider who advised
the individual to self-quarantine,
depending on the precise reason for the
request. An employee requesting to take
paid sick leave under § 826.20(a)(1)(v)
or expanded family and medical leave
to care for his or her child must provide
the following information: (1) The name
of the child being care for; (2) the name
of the school, place of care, or child care
provider that closed or became
unavailable due to COVID–19 reasons;
and (3) a statement representing that no
other suitable person is available to care
for the child during the period of
requested leave.
For leave taken under the FMLA for
an employee’s own serious health
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condition related to COVID–19, or to
care for the employee’s spouse, son,
daughter, or parent with a serious health
condition related to COVID–19, the
normal FMLA certification requirements
still apply. See 29 CFR 825.306.
K. Health Care Coverage
Section 826.110 explains that an
employee who takes expanded family
and medical leave or paid sick leave is
entitled to continued coverage under the
employer’s group health plan on the
same terms as if the employee did not
take leave. See 29 U.S.C. 2614(c); see
also 29 U.S.C. 1182 and 26 CFR
54.9802–1(e)(2)(i); 29 CFR
2590.702(e)(2)(i) and 45 CFR
146.121(e)(2)(i) (providing that an
employer cannot establish a rule for
group health plan eligibility or set any
individual’s premium or contribution
rate based on whether an individual is
actively at work, unless the employer
treats employees who are absent from
work on sick leave as being actively at
work). This rule defines ‘‘group health
plan’’ using the definition under the
FMLA. See 29 CFR 825.102.
Maintenance of individual health
insurance policies purchased by an
employee from an insurance provider,
as described in 29 CFR 825.209(a), is the
responsibility of the employee.
Section 826.110(b)–(g) explains what
an employer must do to continue group
health plan coverage on the same terms
as if the employee did not take paid sick
leave or expanded family and medical
leave. These requirements are similar to
the regulatory requirements for
employers when employees take FMLA
leave for other reasons. In particular,
while an employee is taking paid sick
leave or expanded family and medical
leave, the employer must maintain the
same group health plan benefits
provided to an employee and his or her
family members covered under the plan
prior to taking leave—including medical
care, surgical care, hospital care, dental
care, eye care, mental health counseling,
substance abuse treatment, and other
benefit coverage. This requirement also
applies to benefits provided through a
supplement to a group health plan,
whether or not the supplement is
provided through a flexible spending
account or other component of a
cafeteria plan.
Likewise, if an employer provides a
new health plan (including a new
benefit package option) or benefits or
changes health benefits or plans while
an employee is taking paid sick leave or
expanded family and medical leave, the
employee is entitled to the new or
changed plan/benefits to the same
extent as if the employee was not on
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leave. The employer must give the
employee notice of any opportunity to
change plans or benefits, and if the
employee requests the changed coverage
it must be provided by the employer.
Employees in a group health plan
who take paid sick leave or expanded
family and medical leave remain
responsible for paying the same portion
of the plan premium that the employee
paid prior to taking leave. If premiums
are adjusted, the employee is required to
pay the new employee premium
contribution on the same terms as other
employees. The employee’s share of
premiums must be paid by the method
normally used during any paid leave; in
many cases, this will be through a
payroll deduction. For unpaid leave, or
where the pay provided by the EFMLEA
or the EPSLA is insufficient to cover the
employee’s premiums, the rule directs
employers to 29 CFR 825.210(c), which
specifies how employers can obtain
payment. If an employee chooses not to
retain group health plan coverage while
taking paid sick leave or expanded
family and medical leave, the employee
is entitled upon returning from leave to
be reinstated on the same terms as prior
to taking the leave, including family
member coverage.
L. Multiemployer Plans
An employer that is a signatory to a
multiemployer collective bargaining
agreement may satisfy its obligations
under the EFMLEA and the EPSLA by
making contributions to a
multiemployer fund, plan, or other
program consistent with its bargaining
obligations and its collective bargaining
agreement. The contributions must be
based on the amount of paid sick leave
and expanded family and medical leave
to which the employee is entitled under
the applicable provisions of the FFCRA
based on each employee’s work under
the multiemployer collective bargaining
agreement. The fund, plan, or other
program must allow employees to
obtain their pay for the leave to which
they are entitled under the FFRCA.
Alternatively, an employer that is part
of a multiemployer collective bargaining
agreement may choose to satisfy its
obligations under the FFCRA by means
other than through contribution to a
plan, fund, or program, provided they
are consistent with its bargaining
obligations and collective bargaining
agreement.
M. Return to Work
Section 826.130 describes an
employee’s right to return to work after
taking paid leave under the EPSLA or
the EFMLEA. In most instances, an
employee is entitled to be restored to
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the same or an equivalent position upon
return from paid sick leave or expanded
family and medical leave in the same
manner that an employee would be
returned to work after FMLA leave. See
the FMLA job restoration provisions at
29 CFR 825.214 and the FMLA
equivalent position provisions at 29
CFR 825.215.
However, the new statute does not
protect an employee from employment
actions, such as layoffs, that would have
affected the employee regardless of
whether the leave was taken. The
employer must be able to demonstrate
that the employee would have been laid
off even if he or she had not taken leave.
This provision tracks the existing
provision under the FMLA in 29 CFR
825.216. The employer has the same
burden of proof to show that an
employee would not otherwise have
been employed at the time
reinstatement is requested in order to
deny restoration to employment.
The EFMLEA amendments to the
FMLA specify that the FMLA’s
restoration provision in 29 U.S.C.
2614(a)(1) does not apply to an
employer who has fewer than twentyfive employees if all four of the
following conditions are met:
(a) The employee took leave to care
for his or her son or daughter whose
school or place of care was closed or
whose child care provider was
unavailable;
(b) The employee’s position no longer
exists due to economic or operating
conditions that (i) affect employment
and (ii) are caused by a public health
emergency (i.e., due to COVID–19
related reasons) during the period of the
employee’s leave;
(c) The employer made reasonable
efforts to restore the employee to the
same or an equivalent position; and
(d) If the employer’s reasonable efforts
to restore the employee fail, the
employer makes reasonable efforts for a
period of time to contact the employee
if an equivalent position becomes
available. The period of time is
specified to be one year beginning either
on the date the leave related to COVID–
19 reasons concludes or the date twelve
weeks after the employee’s leave began,
whichever is earlier.
In addition, as these provisions
amend the FMLA, the existing
limitation to job restoration for ‘‘key’’
employees is applicable to leave taken
under the EFMLEA. The FMLA’s key
employee regulations are in 29 CFR
825.217.
N. Recordkeeping
Section 826.140 explains that an
employer is required to retain all
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documentation provided pursuant to
§ 826.100 for four years, regardless of
whether leave was granted or denied. If
an Employee provided oral statements
to support his or her request for paid
sick leave or expanded family and
medical leave, the employer is required
to document and retain such
information for four years. If an
employer denies an employee’s request
for leave pursuant to the small business
exemption under § 826.40(b), the
employer must document its authorized
officer’s determination that the
prerequisite criteria for that exemption
are satisfied and retain such
documentation for four years. Section
826.140 also explains what documents
the employer should create and retain to
support its claim for tax credits from the
Internal Revenue Service (IRS). A more
detailed explanation of how Employers
may claim tax credits can be found at
https://www.irs.gov/forms-pubs/aboutform-7200 and https://www.irs.gov/pub/
irs-drop/n-20-21.pdf.
O. Prohibited Acts and Enforcement
Sections 826.150 and 826.151
describe certain acts that are prohibited
under the EPSLA and the EFMLEA, as
well as enforcement mechanisms.
Section 826.150(a) explains that,
under the EPSLA, employers are
prohibited from discharging,
disciplining, or discriminating against
any employee because the employee
took paid sick leave, initiated a
proceeding under or related to paid sick
leave, or testified or is about to testify
in such a proceeding.
Section 826.150(b) explains that an
employer who violates the paid sick
leave requirements is considered to
have failed to pay the minimum wage
required by section 6 of the FLSA, and
an employer who violates the
prohibition on discharge, discipline, or
discrimination described in section
826.150(a) is considered to have
violated section 15(a)(3) of the FLSA.
See 29 U.S.C. 206, 215(a)(3). With
respect to such violations, the relevant
enforcement provisions of sections 16
and 17 of the FLSA apply. See 29 U.S.C.
216, 217.
For instance, an employee may
maintain, on behalf of the employee and
any other similarly-situated employees,
an action in any federal or state court of
competent jurisdiction to recover an
amount equal to the federal minimum
wage for each hour of paid sick leave
denied, an additional equal amount as
liquidated damages, and an amount for
costs and reasonable attorney’s fees.
Moreover, the Secretary may bring an
action against an employer to recover an
amount equal to the Federal minimum
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wage for each hour of paid sick leave
denied, and an additional equal amount
as liquidated damages, or to obtain an
injunction against the employer.
Finally, in the case of a repeated or
willful violation, the employer shall
also be subject to a civil penalty for each
violation, and liable in an additional
amount, as liquidated damages, equal to
the minimum wage for each hour of
paid sick leave denied.
Section 826.151(a) explains that, for
purposes of the EFMLEA, employers are
subject to the prohibitions that apply
with respect to all FMLA leave, which
are set forth at 29 U.S.C. 2615.
Specifically, employers are prohibited
from interfering with, restraining, or
denying an employee’s exercise of or
attempt to exercise any right under the
FMLA, including the EFMLEA;
discriminating against an employee for
opposing any practice made unlawful
by the FMLA, including the EFMLEA;
or interfering with proceedings initiated
under the FMLA, including the
EFMLEA.
Section 826.151(b) explains that, for
purposes of the EFMLEA, employers are
subject to the enforcement provisions
set forth in section 107 of the FMLA,
with one exception: an employee may
not bring a private action against an
employer under the EFMLEA if the
employer, although subject to the
EFMLEA, is not otherwise subject to the
FMLA. See 29 U.S.C. 2617; 29 CFR
825.400. In other words, an employee
can only bring an action against an
employer under the EFMLEA if the
employer has had 50 or more employees
for each working day during each of
twenty or more calendar workweeks in
the current or preceding calendar year,
as required by section 101(4)(A)(i) of the
FMLA.
Section 826.152 provides that
employees may file complaints alleging
violations of the EPSLA and/or the
EFMLEA with WHD.
Section 826.153 sets out the
Secretary’s investigative authority under
the EPSLA and the EFMLEA. Under the
EPSLA, the Secretary may investigate
and gather data in the same manner as
authorized by sections 9 and 11 of the
FLSA. See 29 U.S.C. 209, 211. Under the
EFMLEA, the Secretary may investigate
and gather data in the same manner as
authorized by sections 106(a) and (d) of
the FMLA. See 29 U.S.C. 2616(a), (d).
The provisions authorize, among other
things, the Secretary to enter a
workplace and have access to, inspect,
and copy documents, and/or require
witness attendance and testimony,
relating to any matter under
investigation, from any person or entity
being investigated or proceeded against,
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at any stage of any proceeding or
investigation, at any place in the United
States. They also permit the Secretary to
compel the production of relevant
documents or testimony by subpoena as
permitted by these provisions of law,
including that in the event of any failure
or refusal to comply with such a
subpoena, the Secretary may obtain
from any district court in the United
States an order to compel production
and/or testimony. Failure to obey such
an order may be enforced through
contempt proceedings.
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P. Effect of Other Laws, Employer
Practices, and Collective Bargaining
Agreements
Section 826.160 discusses the effect of
taking paid sick leave and expanded
family and medical leave on other
rights, benefits, employer practices, and
collective bargaining agreements. The
statutory provisions underlying this
section appear in the EPSLA.
Section 826.160(a)(1) explains that an
employee’s entitlement to, or actual use
of, paid sick leave is not grounds for
diminishment, reduction, or elimination
of any other right or benefit to which the
employee is entitled under any other
federal, state, or local law, under any
collective bargaining agreement, or
under any employer policy that existed
prior to April 1, 2020. See 29 U.S.C.
2651(b), 2652. Paid sick leave is in
addition to, and not a substitute for,
other sources of leave which the
employee had already accrued, was
already entitled to, or had already used,
before the EPSLA became operational
on April 1, 2020, and effective on April
2, 2020. Therefore, neither eligibility
for, nor use of, paid sick leave may
count against an employee’s balance or
accrual of any other source or type of
leave.
Section 826.160(a)(2) explains that an
employer may not deny an employee
paid sick leave or expanded family and
medical leave on the grounds that the
employee has already taken another
type of leave or taken leave from
another source, including leave taken
for reasons related to COVID–19.
Regardless of how much other leave an
employee has taken up to the date he or
she requests paid sick leave or
expanded family and medical leave, the
employer must permit the employee to
immediately take any and all paid sick
leave or expanded family and medical
leave to which he or she is entitled and
eligible under the EPSLA and the
EFMLEA. However, the preceding
analysis does not apply to or affect the
FMLA’s twelve workweeks within a
twelve-month period cap.
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The Department interprets ‘‘existing
employer policy’’ in section 5107(1)(C)
of the FFCRA to include a COVID–19
related offering of paid leave that the
employer voluntarily issued prior to
April 1, 2020, and under which
employees were offered more paid leave
than under the employer’s standard or
current policy. The Department
acknowledges that some employers
voluntarily offered and provided such
leave to help their employees in this
time of emergency. Nonetheless, the
FFCRA still requires those employers to
provide the entirety of the paid sick
leave and expanded family and medical
leave to which its employees are
eligible, regardless of whether an
employee took the additional paid leave
the employer voluntarily offered. Doing
so is necessary to ensure all eligible
employees receive the full extent of paid
sick leave and expanded family and
medical leave to which they are entitled
under the EPSLA and the EFMLEA.
However, an employer may
prospectively terminate such a
voluntary additional paid leave offering
as of April 1, 2020, or thereafter,
provided that the employer had not
already amended its leave policy to
reflect the voluntary offering. This
means the employer must pay
employees for leave already taken under
such an offering before it is terminated,
but the employer need not continue the
offering in light of the FFCRA taking
effect.
Finally, the Department clarifies that
employees do not have any right or
entitlement to use paid sick leave or
expanded family and medical leave
retroactively, meaning they have no
right or entitlement to be paid through
paid sick leave or expanded family and
medical leave for any unpaid or
partially paid leave taken before April 1,
2020.
Section 826.160(b) explains the
sequencing of paid sick leave with other
types of leave. Pursuant to section 5102
of the FFRCA, an employee may choose
to use paid sick leave prior to using any
other type of paid leave to which he or
she is entitled under any other Federal,
State, or local law; collective bargaining
agreement; or employer policy that
existed prior to April 1, 2020. As this
decision is at the employee’s discretion,
§ 826.160(b)(2) clarifies that no
employer shall require, coerce, or
unduly influence an employee to use
another source of paid leave before
taking paid sick leave. Of course, an
employer may not require or influence
an employee to use unpaid leave prior
to taking paid sick leave; doing so
would be akin to denying or attempting
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to deny the employee the paid sick
leave to which he or she is entitled.
Section 826.160(c) explains the
sequencing of expanded family and
medical leave with other types of leave.
No employer shall require, coerce, or
unduly influence an employee to use
another source of paid leave before
taking expanded family and medical
leave. However, an eligible employee
may elect to use, or an employer may
require that an employee use, leave the
employee has available under the
employer’s policies to care for a child,
such as vacation or personal leave or
paid time off, concurrently. If expanded
family and medical leave is used
concurrently with another source of
paid leave, then the employer has to pay
the employee the full amount to which
the employee is entitled under the
employer’s preexisting paid leave policy
for the period of leave taken, even if that
amount is greater than $200 per day or
$10,000 in the aggregate. But the
employer’s eligibility for tax credits is
still limited to the cap of $200 per day
or $10,000 in the aggregate.
Section 826.160(d)–(e) explains that
an employer has no obligation to
provide, and an employee has no right
or entitlement to receive, financial
compensation or other reimbursement
for unused paid sick leave or unused
expanded family and medical leave in
the event the employee’s employment
ends after April 1, 2020, but before the
FFCRA’s expiration on December 31,
2020. Moreover, the Department
interprets sections 5107(2) and 5109 of
the FFCRA to mean that no employer
has an obligation to provide, and no
employee or former employee has a
right or entitlement to receive, financial
compensation or other reimbursement
for unused paid sick leave or unused
expanded family and medical leave
upon or after the FFCRA’s expiration on
December 31, 2020.
Section 826.160(f) explains that any
one individual employee is limited to a
maximum of two weeks (80 hours) paid
sick leave as described in § 826.160.
Thus, the absolute upper limit of 80
hours of paid sick leave to which one
could potentially be eligible is per
person and not per job. Should an
employee change positions during the
period of time in which the paid sick
leave is in effect, he or she is not
entitled to a new round of paid sick
leave. Once an employee takes the
maximum 80 hours of paid sick leave,
he or she is not entitled to any paid sick
leave from a subsequent employer. If an
employee changes positions before
taking 80 hours of paid sick leave, then
his or her new employer (if covered by
FFCRA) must provide paid sick leave
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until the employee has taken 80 hours
of paid sick leave total regardless of the
employer providing it.
IV. Statutory and Regulatory
Requirements
A. Administrative Procedure Act
This rule is issued without prior
notice and opportunity to comment and
with an immediate effective date
pursuant to the Administrative
Procedure Act (APA). 5 U.S.C. 553(b)
and (d).
B. Executive Order 12866, Regulatory
Planning and Review; and Executive
Order 13563, Improved Regulation and
Regulatory Review
1. Good Cause To Forgo Notice and
Comment Rulemaking
Under E.O. 12866, OIRA determines
whether a regulatory action is
significant and therefore, subject to the
requirements of the E.O. and OMB
review. Section 3(f) of E.O. 12866
defines a ‘‘significant regulatory action’’
as an action that is likely to result in a
rule that (1) has an annual effect on the
economy of $100 million or more, or
adversely affects in a material way a
sector of the economy, productivity,
competition, jobs, the environment,
public health or safety, or state, local, or
tribal governments or communities (also
referred to as economically significant);
(2) creates serious inconsistency or
otherwise interferes with an action
taken or planned by another agency; (3)
materially alters the budgetary impacts
of entitlement grants, user fees, or loan
programs, or the rights and obligations
of recipients thereof; or (4) raises novel
legal or policy issues arising out of legal
mandates, the President’s priorities, or
the principles set forth in the E.O. As
described below, this temporary rule is
economically significant. The
Department has prepared a Regulatory
Impact Analysis (RIA) in connection
with this rule, as required under section
6(a)(3) of Executive Order 12866, and
OMB has reviewed the rule. OIRA has
designated this rule as a ‘‘major rule’’,
as defined by 5 U.S.C. 804(2).
Executive Order 13563 directs
agencies to propose or adopt a
regulation only upon a reasoned
determination that its benefits justify its
costs; the regulation is tailored to
impose the least burden on society,
consistent with achieving the regulatory
objectives; and in choosing among
alternative regulatory approaches, the
agency has selected those approaches
that maximize net benefits. Executive
Order 13563 recognizes that some
benefits are difficult to quantify and
provides that, where appropriate and
permitted by law, agencies may
consider and discuss qualitatively
values that are difficult or impossible to
quantify, including equity, human
dignity, fairness, and distributive
impacts.
The APA, 5 U.S.C. 553(b)(B),
authorizes an agency to issue a rule
without prior notice and opportunity to
comment when the agency, for good
cause, finds that those procedures are
‘‘impracticable, unnecessary, or contrary
to the public interest.’’ The FFCRA
authorizes the Department to issue
regulations under the EPSLA and the
EFMLEA pursuant to the good cause
exception of the APA. FFCRA sections
3102(b) (adding FMLA section
110(a)(3)), 5111.
The Department is bypassing advance
notice and comment because of the
exigency created by sections 3106 and
5108 of the FFCRA, which go into effect
on April 1, 2020, and expire on
December 31, 2020. The COVID–19
pandemic has escalated at a rapid pace
and scale, leaving American families
with difficult choices in balancing work,
child care, and the need to seek medical
attention for illness caused by the virus.
To avoid economic harm to American
families facing these conditions, a
decision to undertake notice and
comment rulemaking would likely delay
final action on this matter by weeks or
months, and would, therefore,
complicate and likely preclude the
Department from successfully exercising
the authority created by sections 3106
and 5108. Moreover, such delay would
be counter to one of the FFCRA’s main
purposes in establishing paid leave:
enabling employees to leave the
workplace now to help prevent the
spread of COVID–19.
2. Good Cause To Proceed With an
Immediate Effective Date
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110(a)(3)), 5111; CARES Act section
3611(1)–(2). For the reasons stated
above, the Department has concluded it
has good cause to make this temporary
rule effective immediately and until the
underlying statute sunsets on December
31, 2020.
The APA also authorizes agencies to
make a rule effective immediately, upon
a showing of good cause, instead of
imposing a 30-day delay. 5 U.S.C.
553(d)(3). The FFCRA authorizes the
Department to issue regulations that are
effective immediately under the EPSLA
and the EFMLEA pursuant to the good
cause exception of the APA. FFCRA
sections 3102(b) (adding FMLA section
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1. Introduction
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2. Overview of the Rule
The rule implements the EPSLA and
the EFMLEA, as modified by the CARES
Act. The EPSLA requires that certain
employers provide two workweeks (up
to 80 hours) of paid sick leave to eligible
employees who need to take leave from
work for specified reasons. The
EFMLEA requires that certain
employers provide up to twelve weeks
of expanded family and medical leave to
eligible employees who need to take
leave from work because the employee
is caring for his or her son or daughter
whose school or place of care is closed
or child care provider is unavailable due
to COVID–19 related reasons. Payments
from employers to employees for such
paid leave, as well as allocable costs
related to the maintenance of health
benefits during the period of the
required leave, is to be reimbursed by
the Department of the Treasury via tax
credits, up to statutory limits, as
provided under the FFCRA.
3. Economic Impacts
The Department estimated the
number of affected employers and
quantified the costs associated with this
temporary rule. The paid sick leave and
the expanded family and medical leave
provisions of the FFCRA both apply to
employers with fewer than 500
employees. The 2017 Statistics of U.S.
Businesses (SUSB) reports that there are
5,976,761 private firms in the U.S. with
fewer than 500 employees.5 This
temporary rule says that small
employers with fewer than 50
employees may qualify for an
exemption from the requirement to
provide leave due to school or place of
care closings or child care unavailability
if the leave payments would jeopardize
the viability of their business as a going
concern. The 2017 SUSB reports that
there are 5,755,307 private firms with
fewer than 50 employees, representing
96 percent of all impacted firms (firms
with fewer than 500 employees). The
employers who are not able to qualify
for the exemption discussed above are
those with fewer than 500 employees
but greater than or equal to 50
employees. Using the SUSB data
mentioned above, the Department
estimates that there are 221,454 firms
that meet this criteria.
Although the rule exempts certain
health care providers and emergency
responders from the definition of
eligible employee for purposes of the
FFCRA, their employers may have some
5 Statistics of U.S. Businesses 2017, https://
www.census.gov/data/tables/2017/econ/susb/2017susb-annual.html, 2017 SUSB Annual Data Tables
by Establishment Industry.
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employees who do not meet this
definition, so these employers may still
be impacted by the provisions of the
FFCRA.
The Department estimates that
employees who work for employers
with fewer than 500 employees could
potentially benefit from this rule.
According to the 2017 SUSB data, the
5,976,761 firms that meet this criteria
employ 60,556,081 workers. Not all
eligible employees will require use of
the paid sick leave or expanded family
and medical leave provisions of the
FFCRA. The Department lacks data to
determine how many employees will
use this leave, which type of leave they
will use and for what reason, and the
wages of those who will use the leave.
Certain health care providers and
emergency responders may be excluded
from this group of impacted employees.
The rule defines health care provider to
include anyone employed at any
doctor’s office, hospital, health care
center, clinic, post-secondary
educational institution offering health
care instruction, medical school, local
health department or agency, nursing
facility, retirement facility, nursing
home, home health care provider, any
facility that performs laboratory or
medical testing, pharmacy, or any
similar institution. According to the
SUSB data mentioned above, employers
with fewer than 500 employees in the
health care and social assistance
industry employ 9.0 million workers.6
This estimate is likely to be the upper
bound of potentially exempt health care
industry workers, because it could
include workers that may not be
employed at an institution covered by
the exemption. This estimate may not,
however, include employees who
provide services to the health care
industry. The SUSB data does not
include further industry breakouts, and
so the Department is unable to
determine the exact number of workers
employed at these organizations with
fewer than 500 employees.
The rule defines emergency
responders as anyone necessary for the
provision of transport, care, healthcare,
comfort and nutrition of such patients,
or others needed for the response to
COVID–19. The rule provides a list of
occupations that includes but is not
limited to military or National Guard,
law enforcement officers, correctional
institution personnel, fire fighters,
emergency medical services personnel,
physicians, nurses, public health
6 Statistics of U.S. Businesses 2017, https://
www.census.gov/data/tables/2017/econ/susb/2017susb-annual.html, 2017 SUSB Annual Data Tables
by Establishment Industry.
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personnel, emergency medical
technicians, paramedics, emergency
management personnel, 911 operators,
child welfare workers and service
providers, and public works personnel.
Because this list consists of occupations
spread across various industries, the
Department is unable to use the SUSB
data to determine the magnitude of
potential affected emergency
responders. According to the May 2018
BLS Occupational Employment and
Wages estimates, these occupations
have a combined employment of 4.4
million.7 This may be an over count or
an under count of the potentially
exempt emergency responders. The
estimate may be an over count because
it includes employees who work for
employers of all sizes, not just those
with fewer than 500 employees. The
estimate may be an under count because
it does not include military or national
guard, as they are not counted in the
OES estimates.
i. Costs
This temporary rule implementing the
paid sick leave and expanded family
and medical leave provisions of the
FFCRA will result in four different
categories of costs to employers: Rule
familiarization costs, documentation
costs, costs of posting a notice, and
other managerial and operating costs.
The temporary rule will also result in
increased costs to the Department to
administer the rule and handle
complaints and claims related to the
provisions of the Acts.
a. Rule Familiarization Costs
The Department estimates that all
employers with fewer than 500
employees will need to review the rule
to determine their responsibilities. For
those 5,755,307 employers with fewer
than 50 employees, they will need to
review the rule to determine what the
rules are for all businesses, what the
small employer exemptions are, and
how to either comply or show that the
requirements of the rule would
jeopardize the viability of their
business. The Department estimates that
these small employers will likely spend
one hour to understand their
responsibilities under the rule. For the
221,454 employers with fewer than 500
employees, but greater than or equal to
50 employees, they will likely need to
7 Occupational Employment and Wages, May
2018, https://www.bls.gov/oes/2018/may/
oes131141.htm. The Department used SOC codes
29–1060 (Physicians and Surgeons), 29–1141
(Registered Nurses), 29–1171 (Nurse Practitioners),
29–2041 (Emergency Medical Technicians and
Paramedics), 33–2000 (Fire Fighting and Prevention
Workers), and 33–3000 (Law Enforcement Workers),
to represent the occupations listed in the rule.
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19343
spend one hour to read the rule and
determine their responsibilities to
provide paid sick leave and expanded
family and medical leave. The
Department estimates that this will be a
one-time rule familiarization cost, as the
provisions of the Act sunset on
December 31, 2020.
The Department’s analysis assumes
that the rule would be reviewed by
Compensation, Benefits, and Job
Analysis Specialists (SOC 13–1141) or
employees of similar status and
comparable pay. The median hourly
wage for these workers is $30.29 per
hour.8 In addition, the Department also
assumes that benefits are paid at a rate
of 46 percent 9 and overhead costs are
paid at a rate of 17 percent of the base
wage, resulting in a fully-loaded hourly
wage of $49.37.10 The Department
estimates that the total rule
familiarization cost to employers with
fewer than 50 employees, who spend
one hour reviewing the rule, will be
$284,139,507 (5,755,307 firms × 1 hour
× $49.37). The Department estimates
that the total rule familiarization cost to
employers with greater than or equal to
50 but fewer than 500 employees will be
$10,933,184 (221,454 firms × 1 hour ×
$49.37). Total rule familiarization costs
for all impacted firms will therefore be
$295,072,691.
b. Costs of Documentation
Employers with fewer than 50
employees are able to be exempt from
providing paid sick leave for child care
purposes and expanded family and
medical leave under the FFCRA if they
are able to show that complying with
the requirements would jeopardize the
viability of their business as a going
concern. These employers will need to
demonstrate this burden, and to show
that they are exempt. These small
employers must document the facts and
circumstances to demonstrate this
burden if they have employees who are
requesting paid sick leave or expanded
family and medical leave. Although the
employers are not required to send such
material or documentation to the
Department, they are required to retain
such records for their own files. Some
employers will not qualify for the
exemption. The Department lacks
specific data to estimate the number of
small employers who will use the
exemption, but the Department assumes
8 Occupational Employment and Wages, May
2018, https://www.bls.gov/oes/2018/may/
oes131141.htm.
9 The benefits-earnings ratio is derived from the
Bureau of Labor Statistics’ Employer Costs for
Employee Compensation data using variables
CMU1020000000000D and CMU1030000000000D.
10 $30.29 + $30.29(0.46) + $30.29(0.17) = $49.37.
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that until the end of the year, potentially
up to 10 percent of these 5,755,307
employers (575,531) will likely
document that the requirements of the
Act will jeopardize the viability of their
businesses. The Department estimates
that each of these employers will spend
one hour for creating and documenting
these records. Costs of documentation
for these small employers will therefore
be $28,413,965 (575,531 firms × 1 hour
× $49.37).
Employers are required to retain all
records or documentation provided by
the employee prior to taking paid sick
leave or expanded family and medical
leave. When employees take expanded
family and medical leave, employees
must provide their employers with
appropriate documentation in support
of such leave. Employers must retain
this documentation, as it may be
required for tax credits and other
purposes under the FFCRA. For the
221,454 employers with between 50 and
500 employees, the Department
estimates that they will spend an
additional one hour, on average, on
documentation associated with this
rule. For the 5,755,307 employers with
fewer than 50 employees, the
Department assumes that they will
spend 30 minutes, on average, on
documentation associated with this
rule. The time spent by small employers
will be lower because they have fewer
employees, and some of them will be
able to use the small business
exemption from the requirement to
provide leave due to school or childcare
closings. The Department believes an
average of one hour or 30 minutes is
appropriate for the year, because some
employers will not have any employees
that will request leave, so will therefore
not need any documentation, while
other employers will have multiple
employees requesting this leave.
Documentation costs for these
employers will therefore be
$153,002,937 (5,755,307 × 0.5 hours ×
$49.37) + (221,454 × 1 hour × $49.37).
Total documentation costs for
employers of all sizes are therefore
estimated to be $181,416,902
($28,413,965 + $153,002,937).
c. Costs of Posting a Notice
Section 5103(a) of the FFCRA requires
employers to post a notice to inform
their employees of the requirements of
the EPSLA. The notice must be posted
in a conspicuous place on the premises
of the employer where notices to
employees are customarily posted, or
emailed or direct mailed to employees,
or posted electronically on an employee
information internal or external website.
All employers covered by the paid sick
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leave and expanded family and medical
leave provisions of the FFCRA are
required to post this notice. The
Department estimates that all 5,976,761
employers with fewer than 500
employees will post this notice, and that
99 percent of employers (5,916,993) will
post the information electronically
while 1 percent (59,768) will physically
post the notice on employee bulletin
boards. The Department estimates that it
will take 15 minutes (or 0.25 hours) for
employers posting the provision
electronically to prepare and post the
provision, and it will take 75 minutes
(or 1.25 hours) for employers posting
the notice manually to prepare the
notice and post it in a conspicuous
place where notices to employees are
customarily posted. Employers who
post electronically will incur a one-time
cost of $73,030,486 (5,916,993 × 0.25 ×
$49.37) and those who physically post
the notice will incur a one-time cost of
$3,688,433 (59,768 × 1.25 × $49.37).
Therefore, the total cost of posting this
notice will be $76,718,919. Employers
may also incur a small cost of manually
producing the notices, including paper,
printer ink, etc., but the Department
believes that this cost will be minimal
compared to the cost of the time spent
preparing and posting the notice.
d. Other Managerial and Operating
Costs
In order to comply with the paid sick
leave and expanded family and medical
leave provisions of the FFCRA,
employers may incur additional
managerial and operating costs that the
Department is unable to quantify. For
example, when employees require the
use of this paid leave, employers will
need to determine if their employees are
eligible for the leave, and will need to
calculate the amount that an employee
should receive, and will need to make
the adjustments to an employee’s
paycheck, and will also need to adjust
bookkeeping practices to track the
amount of leave used by an employee.
Because the Department lacks data on
how many employees will require either
paid sick leave or expanded family and
medical leave through the end of the
year, the total managerial and operation
costs incurred by employers cannot be
quantified. However, for illustrative
purposes, for each employee that
requires the use of this leave, the
Department estimates it will take an
employer two hours to complete these
additional tasks. If these tasks are
performed by a Compensation, Benefits,
and Job Analysis Specialist with a fullyloaded hourly wage of $49.37, then the
cost to each employer per employee
requiring leave is $98.74. The
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Department estimates that all 5,976,761
firms with fewer than 500 employees
could potentially incur this cost, but is
unable to determine the extent to which
leave will be used by employees given
the various eligibility requirements, and
therefore cannot estimate the total
managerial and operation costs
incurred.
There are likely other costs to
employers for which the Department is
unable to quantify in part because the
number of employees who will qualify
for leave under the FFCRA and take
such leave at each employer is unknown
and because the productivity losses
caused by employees taking leave likely
vary by employer and for each
individual employee, but which are
discussed qualitatively here. The new
paid leave provisions of the Act may
result in an increase in the number of
employees who take advantage of sick
leave and family and medical leave,
compared to the number of employees
who would use leave absent the new
provisions. When an employee takes
leave, the overall productivity of the
business likely will suffer (although
there could be some offsetting
productivity improvements if coworkers
are less likely to become infected) and,
in some instances, the business may
face unique operational challenges
which could hinder its ability to
continue operations for the same
duration or at the same capacity as
before the employee(s) took leave. These
costs are difficult to quantify, but likely
will be significant, especially if a large
number of employees are eligible for,
and take, leave. These costs are not
created specifically because of any
unique features of this temporary rule,
but are directly linked to the statute’s
leave provisions.
e. Costs to the Department
WHD will also incur costs associated
with the paid sick leave and expanded
family and medical leave provisions of
the FFCRA. Prior to this Act, WHD had
not enforced a comprehensive paid sick
leave program applicable to a large
segment of the U.S. workforce (minus
the exemptions). WHD will incur the
additional costs of setting up a new
enforcement program, administering the
program, and processing complaints
associated with this new provision. The
Department does not have data to assess
this cost to the Department.
ii. Cost Summary
As discussed above, the quantified
costs associated with the paid sick leave
and expanded family and medical leave
provisions of the FFCRA and with this
temporary rule are rule familiarization
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costs, costs of documentation, and the
cost of posting a notice. Table 1
summarizes all of these costs in 2018
dollars. The Department estimates that
total costs in 2020 are $553 million.
iii. Transfers
The transfers associated with this rule
are the paid sick leave and expanded
family and medical leave that
employees will receive as a result of the
FFCRA. The paid leave will initially be
provided by employers, who will then
be reimbursed by the Department of the
Treasury through a tax credit, up to
statutory limits, which is then
ultimately paid for by taxpayers
(although there may be some offsetting
taxpayer effects due to statutory limits,
which is then ultimately paid for by
taxpayers’ reduced reliance on social
assistance programs). Such transfers
may be reduced if employees opt to use
or employers require that employees use
certain pre-existing leave (i.e., personal
or vacation leave or paid time off)
concurrently with any EFMLEA leave.
As discussed above, the total number of
employees who are potentially eligible
for this leave is as high as 61 million,
but the number of employees who will
actually use the leave will be a smaller
share of this total. The Department does
not know to what extent employees will
be exposed to COVID–19 themselves,
will be subject to a Federal, State, or
local quarantine, will be caring for an
individual exposed to COVID–19, or
will need to stay home to take care of
a child out of school or child care (and
unable to telework), and therefore does
not know how many employees will
require use of the paid leave provided
in the Act. In order to quantify the
potential transfer, the Department
would need to determine the number of
days of leave that would be taken, and
the monetary value of those days of
leave. The FFCRA requires employers to
pay leave based on an employee’s
regular rate, so the Department would
need to determine the regular rate of
each employee who requests leave. This
estimate could vary greatly depending
on the occupations and industries of
employees requesting leave. The share
of the regular rate used to calculate the
transfer would also depend on the
reason for which an employee requires
the use of paid leave. The Department
would also need to determine the
number of days each employee would
take leave, the type of leave employees
would take, and whether EFMLEA leave
would run concurrently with certain
previously-provided leave, all of which
would vary depending on whether they
are taking paid sick leave or expanded
family and medical leave. If an
employee requires the use of paid sick
leave to self-quarantine, they will likely
take the entire 80 hours allotted,
because the CDC’s guidelines
recommend a quarantine period of two
weeks. Additionally, an employee may
take up to ten weeks of paid expanded
family and medical leave to care for his
or her child whose school or place of
care is closed or child care provider is
unavailable. For school districts that
have closed through the end of the 2020
school year, it is likely that these
parents would take the entire twelve
week allotment. The Department lacks
data to determine which employees will
need leave, how many days of leave will
ultimately be used, and how much pay
employers will be required to provide
for such leave. Although the Department
is unable to quantify the transfer of paid
leave, we expect that it is likely to
exceed $100 million in 2020.
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iv. Benefits
The benefits of the paid sick leave and
expanded family and medical leave
provisions of the FFCRA are vast, and
although unable to be quantified, are
expected to greatly outweigh any costs
of these provisions. With the availability
of paid leave, sick or potentially
exposed workers will be encouraged to
stay home, thereby helping to curb the
spread of the virus and lessen the strain
on hospitals and health care providers.
If employees still receive pay while on
leave, they will benefit from being able
to cover necessary expenses, and to
continue to spend money to help
support the economy. This will have
spillover effects not only on the
individuals who receive pay while on
leave, but also on their communities
and the national economy as a whole,
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which is facing unique challenges due
to the COVID–19 global pandemic.
The expanded family and medical
leave provisions of the FFCRA will
allow parents to care for their children
who are out of school, or whose
childcare provider is unavailable due to
COVID–19 related reasons. This will
allow parents to avoid extra childcare
costs that they otherwise may have to
incur.
Without this paid sick leave and
expanded family and medical leave
(that is, without the policy of tying some
federal COVID–19 assistance to
employment arrangements), there could
be long-term costs in addition to the
short term impacts listed above. For
example, there could be substantial
rehiring costs for employers when the
public health concern has abated and,
simultaneously, transition costs to
workers as they restart their careers. A
spillover effect of these frictions might
be increased reliance on social
assistance programs.
v. Regulatory Alternatives
The Department notes that the FFCRA
delegates to the Secretary the authority
to issue regulations to ‘‘exclude certain
health care providers and emergency
responders from the definition of
eligible employee’’ under section
110(a)(1)(A) of the EFMLEA and 5110(1)
of the EPSLA; ‘‘to exempt small
businesses with fewer than 50
employees from the requirements’’ of
section 102(a)(1)(F) of EFMLEA and
5102(a)(5) of the EPSLA ‘‘when the
imposition of such requirements would
jeopardize the viability of the business
as a going concern’’; and ‘‘as necessary
to carry out the purposes of the EPSLA
to ensure consistency between it and
Division C and Division G of the
FFCRA.’’
Because the FFCRA itself establishes
the basic expanded family and medical
leave and paid sick leave requirements
that the Department is responsible for
implementing, many potential
regulatory alternatives would be beyond
the scope of the Department’s authority
in issuing this temporary rule. The
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Department considered two regulatory
alternatives to determine the correct
balance between providing benefits to
employees and imposing compliance
costs on covered employers. This
section presents the two alternatives to
the provisions set forth in this
temporary rule.
The Department considered one
regulatory alternative that would be less
restrictive than what is currently being
issued and two that would be more
restrictive. For the less-restrictive
option, the Department considered
excluding all small businesses with
fewer than 50 employees from the
requirements of the FFCRA, assuming
that any requirement to provide
expanded family and medical leave or
paid sick leave for child care to their
employees would jeopardize the
viability of those small businesses. The
Department concluded, however, that
requiring small businesses to
demonstrate that the viability of their
business will be jeopardized if they
have to provide paid leave would
ensure uniformity among these
employers, help the Department
administer sections 102(a)(1)(F) of
FMLA and 5102(a)(5) of the EPSLA, and
would best conform to the FFCRA.
For the first more restrictive
alternative, the Department considered
requiring small businesses with fewer
than 50 employees to maintain formal
records in order to demonstrate a need
for exemption from the rule’s
requirements. The Department
concluded, however, that this
requirement would be unnecessarily
onerous for these employers,
particularly given that they are not
otherwise subject to the FMLA. The
Department believes that the
requirements issued in this temporary
rule will ensure that small employers
have the flexibility they need to balance
their staffing and business needs during
the COVID–19 public health emergency.
For the second more restrictive
alternative, the Department considered
using a more narrow definition of health
care provider and emergency responder
for purposes of excluding such
employees from the EPSLA’s paid sick
leave requirements and/or the
EFMLEA’s expanded family and
medical leave requirements. The
Department considered only allowing
employers to exclude those workers
who directly work with COVID–19
patients, but felt that such a limitation
would not provide sufficient flexibility
to the health care community to make
necessary staffing decisions to address
the COVID–19 public health emergency.
Further, a more narrow definition could
leave health care facilities without staff
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to perform critical services needed to
battle COVID–19.
C. Regulatory Flexibility Analysis
The Regulatory Flexibility Act of 1980
(RFA), 5 U.S.C. 601 et seq., as amended
by the Small Business Regulatory
Enforcement Fairness Act of 1996,
Public Law 104–121 (March 29, 1996),
requires federal agencies engaged in
rulemaking to consider the impact of
their proposals on small entities,
consider alternatives to minimize that
impact, and solicit public comment on
their analyses. The RFA requires the
assessment of the impact of a regulation
on a wide range of small entities,
including small businesses, not-forprofit organizations, and small
governmental jurisdictions. Agencies
must perform a review to determine
whether a proposed or final rule would
have a significant economic impact on
a substantial number of small entities. 5
U.S.C. 603 and 604.
As discussed above, the Department
calculated rule familiarization costs,
documentation costs, and the cost of
posting a notice for all employers with
fewer than 500 employees. For
employers with fewer than 50
employees, their one-time rule
familiarization cost would be $49.37.
Their cost for documentation would be
$24.69, and the cost of posting a notice
would be $12.84. Total cost to these
employers would be $111.58. An
additional ten percent of employers
with fewer than 50 employees will have
an additional documentation cost of
$49.37 for qualifying for the small
employer exemption, bringing their total
cost to $160.95. For employers with at
least 50 employees but fewer than 500
employees, their one-time rule
familiarization cost would be $49.37.
Their cost for documentation would be
$49.37, and the cost of posting a notice
would be $12.84. The average
managerial and operational cost to an
employer would be $98.74. Total cost to
these employers would be $210.32.
These estimated costs will be minimal
for small business entities, and will be
well below one percent of their gross
annual revenues, which is typically at
least $100,000 per year for the smallest
businesses. Based on this determination,
the Department certifies that the rule
will not have a significant economic
impact on a substantial number of small
entities.
D. Unfunded Mandates Reform Act of
1995
The Unfunded Mandates Reform Act
of 1995 (UMRA) requires agencies to
prepare a written statement for rules
that include any federal mandate that
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may result in increased expenditures by
state, local, and tribal governments, in
the aggregate, or by the private sector, of
$165 million ($100 million in 1995
dollars adjusted for inflation using the
CPI–U) or more in at least one year. This
statement must: (1) Identify the
authorizing legislation; (2) present the
estimated costs and benefits of the rule
and, to the extent that such estimates
are feasible and relevant, its estimated
effects on the national economy; (3)
summarize and evaluate state, local, and
tribal government input; and (4) identify
reasonable alternatives and select, or
explain the non-selection, of the least
costly, most cost-effective, or least
burdensome alternative.
(1) Authorizing Legislation
This rule is issued pursuant to the
FFCRA.
(2) Assessment of Quantified Costs and
Benefits
For purposes of the UMRA, this rule
includes a federal mandate that is
expected to result in increased
expenditures of more than $165 million
in the first year. Based on the cost
analysis in this temporary rule, the
Department determined that the rule
will result in Year 1 total costs for rule
familiarization, documentation, and
posting of notices totaling $553 million
(see Table 1). There will be no
additional costs incurred in subsequent
years.
UMRA requires agencies to estimate
the effect of a regulation on the national
economy if, at its discretion, such
estimates are reasonably feasible and the
effect is relevant and material.11
However, OMB guidance on this
requirement notes that such
macroeconomic effects tend to be
measurable in nationwide econometric
models only if the economic effect of
the regulation reaches 0.25 percent to
0.5 percent of GDP, or in the range of
$51.5 billion to $102.9 billion (using
2018 GDP). A regulation with smaller
aggregate effect is not likely to have a
measurable effect in macroeconomic
terms unless it is highly focused on a
particular geographic region or
economic sector, which is not the case
with this rule. Given OMB’s guidance,
the Department has determined that a
full macroeconomic analysis is not
likely to show that these costs would
have any measurable effect on the
economy.
(3) Least Burdensome Option Explained
The Department believes that it has
chosen the least burdensome option
11 See
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given the FFCRA’s provisions. Although
the Department is requiring small
employers with fewer than 50
employees to maintain formal records in
order to demonstrate a need for
exemption from the rule’s requirements
they are not required to provide any
documents to the Department. The
Department believes that the
requirements issued in this temporary
rule will ensure that small employers
have the flexibility they need to balance
their staffing and business needs during
the COVID–19 pandemic.
E. Executive Order 13132 (Federalism)
This rule does not have substantial
direct effects on the States, on the
relationship between the National
Government and the States, or on the
distribution of power and
responsibilities among the various
levels of government. Therefore, in
accordance with section 6 of Executive
Order No. 13132, 64 FR 43255 (Aug. 4,
1999), this rule does not have sufficient
federalism implications to warrant the
preparation of a federalism summary
impact statement.
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F. Executive Order 13175, Indian Tribal
Governments
This rule would not have substantial
direct effects on one or more Indian
tribes, on the relationship between the
Federal Government and Indian tribes,
or on the distribution of power and
responsibilities between the Federal
Government and Indian tribes.
G. Paperwork Reduction Act
The Paperwork Reduction Act of 1995
(PRA), 44 U.S.C. 3501 et seq., and its
attendant regulations, 5 CFR part 1320,
require the Department to consider the
agency’s need for its information
collections, their practical utility, as
well as the impact of paperwork and
other information collection burdens
imposed on the public, and how to
minimize those burdens. The
Department is seeking emergency
approval related to the collection of
information described herein. Persons
are not required to respond to the
information collection requirements
until OMB approves them under the
PRA. This temporary rule creates a new
information collection specific to paid
leave under the FFCRA. The
Department has created a new
information collection request and
submitted the request to OMB for
approval under OMB control number
1235–0NEW (Paid Leave under the
Families First Coronavirus Response
Act) for this action.
Summary: Section 826.140(a) requires
covered employer to document and
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retain information submitted by an
employees to support requests for paid
sick leave and expanded family and
medical leave. Section 826.140(a)
further requires any employer that
denies a request for leave pursuant to
the small business exemption under
§ 826.40(b) must document and retain
the determination by its authorizing
officer that it meets the criteria for that
exemption. Finally, § 826.140(c)
advises, but does not require, employers
to create and maintain certain records
for the purpose of obtaining a tax credit
from the Internal Revenue Service.
Purpose and Use: WHD and
employees use employer records to
determine whether covered employers
have complied with various
requirements under the FFCRA.
Employers use the records to document
compliance with the FFCRA.
Technology: The regulations prescribe
no particular order or form of records,
and employers may preserve records in
forms of their choosing, provided that
facilities are available for inspection and
transcription of the records.
Minimizing Small Entity Burden:
Although the FLSA recordkeeping
requirements do involve small
businesses, including small state and
local government agencies, the
Department minimizes respondent
burden by requiring no specific order or
form of records in responding to this
information collection.
Total annual burden estimates, which
reflect the new responses for the
recordkeeping information collection,
are summarized as follows:
Type of Review: Approval of a new
collection.
Agency: Wage and Hour Division,
Department of Labor.
Title: Paid Leave under the Families
First Coronavirus Response Act.
OMB Control Number: 1235–0NEW.
Affected Public: Private Sector:
businesses or other for-profits, farms,
and not-for-profit institutions: State,
Local and Tribal governments; and
individuals or households.
Estimated Number of Respondents:
7,903,071.
Estimated Number of Responses:
7,903,071.
Estimated Burden Hours: 801,962
hours.
Estimated Time per Response:
Various.
Frequency: Various.
Other Burden Cost: $4,255,500
(operations/maintenance).
List of Subjects in 29 CFR Part 826
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Signed at Washington, DC, this 1st day of
April, 2020.
Cheryl M. Stanton,
Administrator, Wage and Hour Division.
For the reasons set out in the
preamble, the Department of Labor
amends title 29 of the Code of Federal
Regulations by adding part 826 to read
as follows:
■
PART 826—PAID LEAVE UNDER THE
FAMILIES FIRST CORONAVIRUS
RESPONSE ACT
Sec.
826.10 General.
826.20 Paid leave entitlements.
826.21 Amount of Paid Sick Leave.
826.22 Amount of pay for Paid Sick Leave.
826.23 Amount of Expanded Family and
Medical Leave.
826.24 Amount of pay for Expanded Family
and Medical Leave.
826.25 Calculating the Regular Rate under
the FFCRA.
826.30 Employee eligibility for leave.
826.40 Employer coverage.
826.50 Intermittent leave.
826.60 Leave to care for a Child due to
School or Place of Care closure or Child
Care unavailability—intersection
between the EPSLA and the EFMLEA.
826.70 Leave to care for a Child due to
School or Place of Care closure or Child
Care unavailability—intersection of the
EFMLEA and the FMLA.
826.80 Employer notice.
826.90 Employee notice of need for leave.
826.100 Documentation of need for leave.
826.110 Health care coverage.
826.120 Multiemployer plans.
826.130 Return to work.
826.140 Recordkeeping.
826.150 Prohibited acts and enforcement
under the EPSLA.
826.151 Prohibited acts and enforcement
under the EFMLEA.
826.152 Filing a complaint with the Federal
Government.
826.153 Investigative authority of the
Secretary.
826.160 Effect on other laws, employer
practices, and collective bargaining
agreements.
Authority: Pub. L. 116–127 sections
3102(b) and 5111(3); Pub. L. 116–136 section
3611(7).
§ 826.10
General.
(a) Definitions. For the purposes of
this rule:
Child Care Provider. The term ‘‘Child
Care Provider’’ means a provider who
receives compensation for providing
child care services on a regular basis.
The term includes a center-based child
care provider, a group home child care
provider, a family child care provider,
or other provider of child care services
for compensation that is licensed,
regulated, or registered under State law
as described in section 9858c(c)(2)(E) of
Title 42; and satisfies the State and local
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requirements, including those referred
to in section 9858c(c)(2)(F) of Title 42.
Under the Families First Coronavirus
Response Act (FFCRA), the eligible
child care provider need not be
compensated or licensed if he or she is
a family member or friend, such as a
neighbor, who regularly cares for the
Employee’s child.
Commerce. The terms ‘‘Commerce’’
and ‘‘industry or activity affecting
commerce’’ mean any activity, business,
or industry in commerce or in which a
labor dispute would hinder or obstruct
commerce or the free flow of commerce,
and include ‘‘commerce’’, and any
‘‘industry affecting commerce’’, as
defined in paragraphs (1) and (3) of
section 501 of the Labor Management
Relations Act of 1947 (29 U.S.C. 142 (1)
and (3)).
COVID–19. The term ‘‘COVID–19’’ has
the meaning given the term in section
506 of the Coronavirus Preparedness
Response Supplemental Appropriations
Act, 2020.
EFMLEA. The term ‘‘EFMLEA’’ means
the Emergency Family and Medical
Leave Expansion Act, Division C of the
FFCRA.
Employee. The term ‘‘Employee’’ has
the same meaning given that term in
section 3(e) of the Fair Labor Standards
Act of 1938 (FLSA) (29 U.S.C. 203(e)).
Eligible Employee. For the purposes of
the EFMLEA, the term ‘‘Eligible
Employee’’ means an Employee who has
been employed for at least 30 calendar
days by the Employer.
Employer:
(i) Subject to paragraph (ii) of this
definition, ‘‘Employer’’:
(A) Means any person engaged in
Commerce or in any industry or activity
affecting commerce that:
(1) In the case of a private entity or
individual, employs fewer than 500
Employees; and
(2) In the case of a Public Agency or
any other entity that is not a private
entity or individual, employs one or
more Employees;
(B) Includes:
(1) Any person acting directly or
indirectly in the interest of an employer
in relation to an Employee (within the
meaning of such phrase in section 3(d)
of the FLSA (29 U.S.C. 203(d));
(2) Any successor in interest of an
employer;
(3) Joint employers as defined under
the FLSA, part 791 of this chapter, with
respect to certain Employees; and
(4) Integrated employers as defined
under the Family and Medical Leave
Act (FMLA), § 825.104(c)(2) of this
chapter.
(C) Includes any Public Agency; and
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(D) Includes the Government
Accountability Office and the Library of
Congress.
(ii) For purposes of the EPSLA,
‘‘Employer’’ also specifically identifies
the following as an employer:
(A) An entity employing a State
Employee described in section 304(a) of
the Government Employee Rights Act of
1991;
(B) An employing office, as defined in
section 101 of the Congressional
Accountability Act of 1995;
(C) An employing office, as defined in
3 U.S.C. 411(c); and
(D) An Executive Agency as defined
in section 5 U.S.C. 105, and including
the U.S. Postal Service and the Postal
Regulatory Commission.
EPSLA. The term ‘‘EPSLA’’ means the
Emergency Paid Sick Leave Act,
Division E of the FFCRA.
Expanded Family and Medical Leave.
The term ‘‘Expanded Family and
Medical Leave’’ means paid leave under
the EFMLEA.
FFCRA. The term ‘‘FFCRA’’ means the
Families First Coronavirus Response
Act, Public Law 116–127.
FLSA Terms. The terms ‘‘employ’’,
‘‘person’’, and ‘‘State’’ have the
meanings given such terms in section 3
of the FLSA (29 U.S.C. 203).
Paid Sick Leave. The term ‘‘Paid Sick
Leave’’ means paid leave under the
EPSLA.
Place of Care. The term ‘‘Place of
Care’’ means a physical location in
which care is provided for the
Employee’s child while the Employee
works for the Employer. The physical
location does not have to be solely
dedicated to such care. Examples
include day care facilities, preschools,
before and after school care programs,
schools, homes, summer camps,
summer enrichment programs, and
respite care programs.
Public Agency. The term ‘‘Public
Agency’’ means the Government of the
United States; the government of a State
or political subdivision thereof; any
agency of the United States (including
the United States Postal Service and
Postal Regulatory Commission), a State,
or a political subdivision of a State; or
any interstate governmental agency. See
29 U.S.C. 203(x); 29 U.S.C.
5110(2)(B)(i)(III). A Public Agency shall
be considered to be a person engaged in
Commerce or in an industry or activity
affecting Commerce. See 29 U.S.C.
2611(4)(B); 29 U.S.C. 5110(2)(B)(ii).
Whether an entity is a Public Agency, as
distinguished from a private Employer,
is determined by whether the agency
has taxing authority, or whether the
chief administrative officer or board,
etc., is elected by the voters-at-large or
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their appointment is subject to approval
by an elected official. See § 825.108 of
this chapter.
Public Health Emergency. The term
‘‘Public Health Emergency’’ means an
emergency with respect to COVID–19
declared by a Federal, State, or local
authority.
School. The term ‘‘School’’ means an
‘‘elementary school’’ or ‘‘secondary
school’’ as such terms are defined
below, in accordance with section 8101
of the Elementary and Secondary
Education Act of 1965 (20 U.S.C. 7801).
‘‘Elementary school’’ means a nonprofit
institutional day or residential school,
including a public elementary charter
school that provides elementary
education, as determined under State
law. ‘‘Secondary school’’ means a
nonprofit institutional day or residential
school, including a public secondary
charter school that provides secondary
education, as determined under State
law, except that the term does not
include any education beyond grade 12.
Secretary. The term ‘‘Secretary’’
means the Secretary of Labor or his or
her designee.
Son or Daughter. The term ‘‘Son or
Daughter’’ has the meaning given such
term in section 101 of the FMLA (29
U.S.C. 2611). Accordingly, the term
means a biological, adopted, or foster
child, a stepchild, a legal ward, or a
child of a person standing in loco
parentis, who is under 18 years of age;
or 18 years of age or older who is
incapable of self-care because of a
mental or physical disability.
Subject to a quarantine or isolation
order. For the purposes of the EPSLA,
a quarantine or isolation order includes
quarantine, isolation, containment,
shelter-in-place, or stay-at-home orders
issued by any Federal, State, or local
government authority that cause the
Employee to be unable to work even
though his or her Employer has work
that the Employee could perform but for
the order. This also includes when a
Federal, State, or local government
authority has advised categories of
citizens (e.g., of certain age ranges or of
certain medical conditions) to shelter in
place, stay at home, isolate, or
quarantine, causing those categories of
Employees to be unable to work even
though their Employers have work for
them.
Telework. The term ‘‘Telework’’
means work the Employer permits or
allows an Employee to perform while
the Employee is at home or at a location
other than the Employee’s normal
workplace. An Employee is able to
Telework if: His or her Employer has
work for the Employee; the Employer
permits the Employee to work from the
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Employee’s location; and there are no
extenuating circumstances (such as
serious COVID–19 symptoms) that
prevent the Employee from performing
that work. Telework may be performed
during normal hours or at other times
agreed by the Employer and Employee.
Telework is work for which wages must
be paid as required by applicable law
and is not compensated as paid leave
under the EPSLA or the EFMLEA.
Employees who are teleworking for
COVID–19 related reasons must be
compensated for all hours actually
worked and which the Employer knew
or should have known were worked by
the Employee. However, the provisions
of § 790.6 of this chapter shall not apply
to Employees while they are
teleworking for COVID–19 related
reasons.
(b) Effective period. (1) This part
became operational on April 1, 2020,
and effective on April 2, 2020.
(2) This part expires on December 31,
2020.
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§ 826.20
Paid Leave Entitlements.
(a) Qualifying reasons for Paid Sick
Leave. (1) An Employer shall provide to
each of its Employees Paid Sick Leave
to the extent that Employee is unable to
work due to any of the following
reasons:
(i) The Employee is subject to a
Federal, State, or local quarantine or
isolation order related to COVID–19;
(ii) The Employee has been advised
by a health care provider to selfquarantine due to concerns related to
COVID–19;
(iii) The Employee is experiencing
symptoms of COVID–19 and seeking
medical diagnosis from a health care
provider;
(iv) The Employee is caring for an
individual who is subject to an order as
described in this paragraph (a)(1)(i) or
directed as described in this paragraph
(a)(1)(ii);
(v) The Employee is caring for his or
her Son or Daughter whose School or
Place of Care has been closed for a
period of time, whether by order of a
State or local official or authority or at
the decision of the individual School or
Place of Care, or the Child Care Provider
of such Son or Daughter is unavailable,
for reasons related to COVID–19; or
(vi) The Employee has a substantially
similar condition as specified by the
Secretary of Health and Human
Services, in consultation with the
Secretary of the Treasury and the
Secretary of Labor. The substantially
similar condition may be defined at any
point during the Effective Period. This
rule became operational on April 1,
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2020, and will be effective April 2,
2020, to December 31, 2020.
(2) Subject to a Quarantine or
Isolation Order. Any Employee Subject
to a Quarantine or Isolation Order may
take Paid Sick Leave for the reason
described in paragraph (a)(1)(i) of this
section only if, but for being subject to
the order, he or she would be able to
perform work that is otherwise allowed
or permitted by his or her Employer,
either at the Employee’s normal
workplace or by Telework. An
Employee Subject to a Quarantine or
Isolation Order may not take Paid Sick
Leave where the Employer does not
have work for the Employee as a result
of the order or other circumstances.
(3) Advised by a health care provider
to self-quarantine. For the purposes of
this section, the term health care
provider has the same meaning as that
term is defined in § 825.102 of this
chapter. An Employee may take Paid
Sick Leave for the reason described in
paragraph (a)(1)(ii) of this section only
if:
(i) A health care provider advises the
Employee to self-quarantine based on a
belief that—
(A) The Employee has COVID–19;
(B) The Employee may have COVID–
19; or
(C) The Employee is particularly
vulnerable to COVID–19; and
(ii) Following the advice of a health
care provider to self-quarantine prevents
the Employee from being able to work,
either at the Employee’s normal
workplace or by Telework.
(4) Seeking medical diagnosis for
COVID–19. An Employee may take Paid
Sick Leave for the reason described in
paragraph (a)(1)(iii) of this section if the
Employee is experiencing any of the
following symptoms:
(i) Fever;
(ii) Dry cough;
(iii) Shortness of breath; or
(iv) Any other COVID–19 symptoms
identified by the U.S. Centers for
Disease Control and Prevention.
(v) Any Paid Sick Leave taken for the
reason described in paragraph (a)(1)(iii)
of this subsection is limited to time the
Employee is unable to work because the
Employee is taking affirmative steps to
obtain a medical diagnosis, such as
making, waiting for, or attending an
appointment for a test for COVID–19.
(5) Caring for an individual. For the
purpose of paragraph (a)(1)(iv) of this
section, ‘‘individual’’ means an
Employee’s immediate family member,
a person who regularly resides in the
Employee’s home, or a similar person
with whom the Employee has a
relationship that creates an expectation
that the Employee would care for the
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19349
person if he or she were quarantined or
self-quarantined. For this purpose,
‘‘individual’’ does not include persons
with whom the Employee has no
personal relationship.
(6) An Employee may not take Paid
Sick Leave for the reason described in
paragraph (a)(1)(iv) of this section
unless, but for a need to care for an
individual, the Employee would be able
to perform work for his or her Employer,
either at the Employee’s normal
workplace or by Telework. An
Employee caring for an individual may
not take Paid Sick Leave where the
Employer does not have work for the
Employee.
(7) An Employee may take Paid Sick
Leave for the reason described in
paragraph (a)(1)(iv) of this section if the
Employee is unable to perform work for
his or her Employer and if the
individual depends on the Employee to
care of him or her and is either:
(i) Subject to a Quarantine or Isolation
Order as described in paragraph
(a)(1)(ii) of this subsection; or
(ii) Has been advised to selfquarantine by a health care provider
because of a belief that—
(A) The individual has COVID–19;
(B) The individual may have COVID–
19 due to known exposure or symptoms
(C) The individual is particularly
vulnerable to COVID–19.
(8) Caring for a Son or Daughter. An
Employee has a need to take Paid Sick
Leave if he or she is unable to work due
to a need to care for his or her Son or
Daughter whose School or Place of Care
has been closed, or whose Child Care
Provider is unavailable, for reasons
related to COVID–19 only if no other
suitable person is available to care for
the Son or Daughter during the period
of such leave.
(9) An Employee may not take Paid
Sick Leave to care for his or her Son or
Daughter unless, but for a need to care
for the Son or Daughter, the Employee
would be able to perform work for his
or her Employer, either at the
Employee’s normal workplace or by
Telework. An Employee caring for his or
her Son or Daughter may not take Paid
Sick Leave where the Employer does not
have work for the Employee.
(b) Qualifying reason for Expanded
Family and Medical Leave. An Eligible
Employee may take Expanded Family
and Medical Leave because he or she is
unable to work due to a need to care for
his or her Son or Daughter whose
School or Place of Care has been closed,
or whose Child Care Provider is
unavailable, for reasons related to
COVID–19. Eligible Employee has need
to take Expanded Family and Medical
Leave for this purpose only if no
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suitable person is available to care for
his or her Son or Daughter during the
period of such leave.
(1) An Eligible Employee may not take
Expanded Family and Medical Leave to
care for his or her Son or Daughter
unless, but for a need to care for an
individual, the Eligible Employee would
be able to perform work for his or her
Employer, either at the Eligible
Employee’s normal workplace or by
Telework. An Eligible Employee caring
for his or her Son or Daughter may not
take Expanded Family and Medical
Leave where the Employer does not
have work for the Eligible Employee.
(2) [Reserved]
(c) Impact on FLSA exemptions. The
taking of Paid Sick Leave or Expanded
Family and Medical Leave shall not
impact an Employee’s status or
eligibility for any exemption from the
requirements of section 6 or 7, or both,
of the FLSA.
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§ 826.21
Amount of Paid Sick Leave.
(a) Full-time Employees. (1) A fulltime Employee is entitled to up to 80
hours of Paid Sick Leave.
(2) An Employee is considered to be
a full-time Employee under this section
if he or she is normally scheduled to
work at least 40 hours each workweek.
(3) An Employee who does not have
a normal weekly schedule under
§ 826.21(a)(2) is considered to be a fulltime Employee under this section if the
average number of hours per workweek
that the Employee was scheduled to
work, including hours for which the
Employee took leave of any type, is at
least 40 hours per workweek over a
period of time that is the lesser of:
(i) The six-month period ending on
the date on which the Employee takes
Paid Sick Leave; or
(ii) The entire period of the
Employee’s employment.
(b) Part-time Employees. An
Employee who does not satisfy the
requirements of § 826.21(a) is
considered to be a part-time Employee.
(1) If the part-time Employee has a
normal weekly schedule, the Employee
is entitled to up to the number of hours
of Paid Sick Leave equal to the number
of hours that the Employee is normally
scheduled to work over two workweeks.
(2) If the part-time Employee lacks a
normal weekly schedule under
§ 826.21(b)(1), the number of hours of
Paid Sick Leave to which the Employee
is entitled is calculated as follows:
(i) If the part-time Employee has been
employed for at least six months, the
Employee is entitled to up to the
number of hours of Paid Sick Leave
equal to fourteen times the average
number of hours that the Employee was
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scheduled to work each calendar day
over the six-month period ending on the
date on which the Employee takes Paid
Sick Leave, including any hours for
which the Employee took leave of any
type.
(ii) If the part-time Employee has been
employed for fewer than six months, the
Employee is entitled to up to the
number of hours of Paid Sick Leave
equal to fourteen times the number of
hours the Employee and the Employer
agreed to at the time of hiring that the
Employee would work, on average, each
calendar day. If there is no such
agreement, the Employee is entitled to
up to the number of hours of Paid Sick
Leave equal to fourteen times the
average number of hours per calendar
day that the Employee was scheduled to
work over the entire period of
employment, including hours for which
the Employee took leave of any type.
§ 826.22
Leave.
Amount of Pay for Paid Sick
(a) Subject to § 826.22(c), for each
hour of Pick Sick Leave taken by an
Employee for qualifying reasons set
forth in sections § 826.20(a)(1)
through(3), the Employer shall pay the
higher of:
(1) The Employee’s average regular
rate as computed under § 826.25;
(2) The Federal minimum wage to
which the Employee is entitled; or
(3) Any State or local minimum wage
to which the Employee is entitled.
(b) Subject to § 826.22(c), for each
hour of Paid Sick Leave taken by an
Employee for qualifying reasons set
forth in § 826.20(a)(4) through (6), the
Employer shall pay the Employee twothirds of the amount described in
§ 826.24(a).
(c) Limitations on payments:
(1) In no event shall an Employer be
required to pay more than $511 per day
and $5,110 in the aggregate per
Employee when an Employee takes Paid
Sick Leave for qualifying reasons set
forth in sections § 826.20(a)(1) through
(3).
(2) In no event shall an Employer be
required to pay more than $200 per day
and $2,000 in the aggregate per
Employee when an Employee takes Paid
Sick Leave for qualifying reasons set
forth in sections § 826.20(a)(4) through
(6).
§ 826.23 Amount of Expanded Family and
Medical Leave.
(a) An Eligible Employee is entitled to
take up to twelve workweeks of
Expanded Family and Medical Leave
during the period April 1, 2020 through
December 31, 2020.
(b) Any time period of Expanded
Family and Medical Leave that an
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Eligible Employee takes counts towards
the twelve workweeks of FMLA leave to
which the Eligible Employee is entitled
for any qualifying reason in a twelvemonth period under § 825.200 of this
chapter, see § 826.70.
(c) Section 2612(d)(2)(A) of the FMLA
shall be applied, provided however, that
the Eligible Employee may elect, and
the Employer may require the Eligible
Employee, to use only leave that would
be available to the Eligible Employee for
the purpose set forth in § 826.20(b)
under the Employer’s existing policies,
such as personal leave or paid time off.
Any leave that an Eligible Employee
elects to use or that an Employer
requires the Eligible Employee to use
would run concurrently with Expanded
Family and Medical Leave taken under
this section.
§ 826.24 Amount of pay for Expanded
Family and Medical Leave.
Subject to § 826.60, after the initial
two weeks of Expanded Family and
Medical Leave, the Employer shall pay
the Eligible Employee two-thirds of the
Eligible Employee’s average regular rate,
as computed under § 826.25, times the
Eligible Employee’s scheduled number
of hours for each day of such leave
taken.
(a) In no event shall an Employer be
required to pay more than $200 per day
and $10,000 in the aggregate per Eligible
Employee when an Eligible Employee
takes Expanded Family and Medical
Leave for up to ten weeks after the
initial two-week period of unpaid
Expanded Family and Medical Leave.
(b) For the purpose of this section, the
‘‘scheduled number of hours’’ is
determined as follows:
(1) If the Eligible Employee has a
normal work schedule, the number of
hours the Eligible Employee is normally
scheduled to work on that workday;
(2) If the Eligible Employee has a
work schedule that varies to such an
extent that an Employer is unable to
determine the number of hours the
Eligible Employee would have worked
on the day for which leave is taken and
has been employed for at least six
months, the average number of hours
the Eligible Employee was scheduled to
work each workday, over the six-month
period ending on the date on which the
Eligible Employee first takes Expanded
Family and Medical Leave, including
hours for which the Eligible Employee
took leave of any type; or
(3) If the Eligible Employee has a
work schedule that varies to such an
extent that an Employer is unable to
determine the number of hours the
Eligible Employee would have worked
on the day for which leave is taken and
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the Eligible Employee has been
employed for fewer than six months, the
average number of hours the Eligible
Employee and the Employer agreed at
the time of hiring that the Eligible
Employee would work each workday. If
there is no such agreement, the
scheduled number of hours is equal to
the average number of hours per
workday that the Eligible Employee was
scheduled to work over the entire
period of employment, including hours
for which the Eligible Employee took
leave of any type.
(c) As an alternative, the amount of
pay for Expanded Family and Medical
Leave may be computed in hourly
increments instead a full day. For each
hour of Expanded Family and Medical
Leave taken after the first two weeks,
the Employer shall pay the Eligible
Employee two-thirds of the Eligible
Employee’s average regular rate, as
computed under § 826.25.
(d) Notwithstanding paragraph (a) of
this section, if an Eligible Employee
elects or is required to use leave
available to the Eligible Employee for
the purpose set forth in § 826.20(b)
under the Employer’s policies, such as
vacation or personal leave or paid time
off, concurrently with Expanded Family
and Medical Leave, the Employer must
pay the Eligible Employee a full day’s
pay for that day. However, the Employer
is capped at taking $200 a day or
$10,000 in the aggregate in tax credits
for Expanded Family and Medical Leave
paid under the EFMLEA.
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§ 826.25 Calculating the Regular Rate
under the Family First Coronavirus
Response Act.
(a) Average regular rate. The ‘‘average
regular rate’’ used to compute pay for
Paid Sick Leave and Expanded Family
and Medical Leave is calculated as
follows:
(1) Use the methods contained in
parts 531 and 778 of this chapter to
compute the regular rate for each full
workweek in which the Employee has
been employed over the lesser of:
(i) The six-month period ending on
the date on which the Employee takes
Paid Sick Leave or Expanded Family
and Medical Leave; or
(ii) The entire period of employment.
(2) Compute the average of the weekly
regular rates under paragraph (a)(1) of
this section, weighted by the number of
hours worked for each workweek.
(b) Calculating the regular rate for
commissions, tips, and piece rates. An
Employee’s commissions, tips, and
piece rates are incorporated into the
regular rate for purposes of the FFCRA
to the same extent that they are
included in the calculation of the
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regular rate under the FLSA, and
§ 531.60 and part 778 of this chapter.
§ 826.30
Employee eligibility for leave.
(a) Eligibility under the EPSLA. All
Employees of an Employer are eligible
for Paid Sick Leave under the EPSLA,
except as provided in paragraphs (c) and
(d) of this section and in § 826.40(b).
(b) Eligibility under the EFMLEA. All
Employees employed by an Employer
for at least thirty calendar days are
eligible for Expanded Family and
Medical Leave under the EFMLEA,
except as provided in paragraphs (c) and
(d) in this section and in § 826.40(b).
(1) An Employee is considered to
have been employed by an Employer for
at least thirty calendar days if:
(i) The Employer had the Employee
on its payroll for the thirty calendar
days immediately prior to the day that
the Employee’s leave would begin; or
(ii) The Employee was laid off or
otherwise terminated by the Employer
on or after March 1, 2020, and rehired
or otherwise reemployed by the
Employer on or before December 31,
2020, provided that the Employee had
been on the Employer’s payroll for
thirty or more of the sixty calendar days
prior to the date the Employee was laid
off or otherwise terminated.
(2) If an Employee employed by a
temporary placement agency is
subsequently hired by the Employer, the
Employer will count the days worked as
a temporary Employee at the Employer
toward the thirty-day eligibility period.
(3) An Employee who has been
employed by a covered Employer for at
least thirty calendar days is eligible for
Expanded Family and Medical Leave
under the EFMLEA regardless of
whether the Employee would otherwise
be eligible for leave under the FMLA.
Thus, for example, an Employee need
not have been employed for 1,250 hours
of service and twelve months of
employment as otherwise required
under the FMLA, see § 825.110(a)(1)(2)
of this chapter, to be eligible for leave
under the EFMLEA.
(c) Exclusion of Employees who are
health care providers and emergency
responders. An Employer whose
Employee is a health care provider or an
emergency responder may exclude such
Employee from the EPSLA’s Paid Sick
Leave requirements and/or the
EFMLEA’s Expanded Family and
Medical Leave requirements.
(1) Health care provider—
(i) For the purposes of this definition
Employees who may be exempted from
Paid Sick Leave or Expanded Family
and Medical Leave by their Employer
under the FFCRA, a health care provider
is anyone employed at any doctor’s
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19351
office, hospital, health care center,
clinic, post-secondary educational
institution offering health care
instruction, medical school, local health
department or agency, nursing facility,
retirement facility, nursing home, home
health care provider, any facility that
performs laboratory or medical testing,
pharmacy, or any similar institution,
Employer, or entity. This includes any
permanent or temporary institution,
facility, location, or site where medical
services are provided that are similar to
such institutions.
(ii) This definition includes any
individual employed by an entity that
contracts with any of these institutions
described above to provide services or
to maintain the operation of the facility
where that individual’s services support
the operation of the facility. This also
includes anyone employed by any entity
that provides medical services,
produces medical products, or is
otherwise involved in the making of
COVID–19 related medical equipment,
tests, drugs, vaccines, diagnostic
vehicles, or treatments. This also
includes any individual that the highest
official of a State or territory, including
the District of Columbia, determines is
a health care provider necessary for that
State’s or territory’s or the District of
Columbia’s response to COVID–19.
(iii) Application limited to leave
under the EPSLA and the EFMLEA. The
definition of ‘‘health care provider’’
contained in this subsection applies
only for the purpose of determining
whether an Employer may elect to
exclude an Employee from taking leave
under the EPSLA and/or the EFMLEA,
and does not otherwise apply for
purposes of the FMLA or section
5102(A)(2) of the EPSLA.
(2) Emergency responders—
(i) For the purposes of Employees
who may be excluded from Paid Sick
Leave or Expanded Family and Medical
Leave by their Employer under the
FFCRA, an emergency responder is
anyone necessary for the provision of
transport, care, healthcare, comfort and
nutrition of such patients, or others
needed for the response to COVID–19.
This includes but is not limited to
military or national guard, law
enforcement officers, correctional
institution personnel, fire fighters,
emergency medical services personnel,
physicians, nurses, public health
personnel, emergency medical
technicians, paramedics, emergency
management personnel, 911 operators,
child welfare workers and service
providers, public works personnel, and
persons with skills or training in
operating specialized equipment or
other skills needed to provide aid in a
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declared emergency, as well as
individuals who work for such facilities
employing these individuals and whose
work is necessary to maintain the
operation of the facility. This also
includes any individual whom the
highest official of a State or territory,
including the District of Columbia,
determines is an emergency responder
necessary for that State’s or territory’s or
the District of Columbia’s response to
COVID–19.
(ii) [Reserved]
(d) Exclusion by OMB. The Director of
the Office of Management and Budget
(OMB) has authority to exclude, for
good cause, certain U.S. Government
Employers with respect to certain
categories of Executive Branch Eligible
Employees from the requirement to
provide paid leave under the EFMLEA.
See CARES Act section 4605.
(e) The Director of the OMB has
authority to exclude certain Employees,
for good cause, from the definition of
‘‘Employee’’ for purposes of the EPSLA.
See CARES Act section 4605. The
categories of Employees the Director of
the OMB has authority to so exclude
from EPSLA are:
(1) Federal officers or Employees
covered under Title II of the FMLA
(which is codified in subchapter V of
chapter 63 of title 5 of the United States
Code);
(2) Other individuals occupying a
position in the civil service (as that term
is defined in 5 U.S.C. 2101(1)); and
(3) Employees of a United States
Executive Agency, as defined in 5
U.S.C. 105, including the U.S. Postal
Service and U.S. Postal Regulatory
Commission.
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§ 826.40
Employer coverage.
(a) Private Employers. Any private
entity or individual who employs fewer
than 500 Employees must provide Paid
Sick Leave and Expanded Family and
Medical Leave, except as provided in
paragraph (b) of this section or in
§ 826.30(c).
(1) To determine the number of
Employees employed, the Employer
must count all full-time and part-time
Employees employed within the United
States at the time the Employee would
take leave. For purposes of this count,
every part-time Employee is counted as
if he or she were a full-time Employee.
(i) For this purpose, ‘‘within the
United States’’ means any State within
the United States, the District of
Columbia, or any Territory or
possession of the United States.
(ii) The number of Employees
includes:
(A) All Employees currently
employed, regardless of how long those
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Employees have worked for the
Employer;
(B) Any Employees on leave of any
kind;
(C) Employees of temporary
placement agencies who are jointly
employed under the FLSA, see part 791
of this chapter, by the Employer and
another Employer (regardless of which
Employer’s payroll the Employee
appears on); and
(D) Day laborers supplied by a
temporary placement agency (regardless
of whether the Employer is the
temporary placement agency or the
client firm).
(iii) The number of Employees does
not include workers who are
independent contractors, rather than
Employees, under the FLSA. Nor does
the number of Employees include
workers who have been laid off or
furloughed and have not subsequently
been reemployed.
(2) To determine the number of
Employees employed, all common
Employees of joint employers or all
Employees of integrated employers must
be counted together.
(i) Typically, a corporation (including
its separate establishments or divisions)
is considered a single Employer and all
of its Employees must be counted
together.
(ii) Where one corporation has an
ownership interest in another
corporation, the two corporations are
separate Employers unless they are joint
employers under the FLSA, see part 791
of this chapter, with respect to certain
Employees.
(iii) In general, two or more entities
are separate Employers unless they meet
the integrated employer test under the
FMLA. See § 825.104(c)(2) of this
chapter. If two entities are an integrated
employer under this test, then
Employees of all entities making up the
integrated employer must be counted.
(b) Exemption from requirement to
provide leave under the EPSLA Section
5102(a)(5) and the EFMLEA for
Employers with fewer than 50
Employees.
(1) An Employer, including a religious
or nonprofit organization, with fewer
than 50 Employees (small business) is
exempt from providing Paid Sick Leave
under the EPSLA and Expanded Family
and Medical Leave under the EFMLEA
when the imposition of such
requirements would jeopardize the
viability of the business as a going
concern. A small business under this
section is entitled to this exemption if
an authorized officer of the business has
determined that:
(i) The leave requested under either
section 102(a)(1)(F) of the FMLA or
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section 5102(a)(5) of the EPSLA would
result in the small business’s expenses
and financial obligations exceeding
available business revenues and cause
the small business to cease operating at
a minimal capacity;
(ii) The absence of the Employee or
Employees requesting leave under either
section 102(a)(1)(F) of the FMLA or
section 5102(a)(5) of the EPSLA would
entail a substantial risk to the financial
health or operational capabilities of the
business because of their specialized
skills, knowledge of the business, or
responsibilities; or
(iii) There are not sufficient workers
who are able, willing, and qualified, and
who will be available at the time and
place needed, to perform the labor or
services provided by the Employee or
Employees requesting leave under either
section 102(a)(1)(F) of the FMLA or
section 5102(a)(5) of the EPSLA, and
these labor or services are needed for
the small business to operate at a
minimal capacity.
(2) To elect this small business
exemption, the Employer must
document that a determination has been
made pursuant to the criteria set forth
by the Department in § 826.40(b)(1). The
Employer should not send such
documentation to the Department, but
rather retain the records in its files.
(3) Regardless of whether a small
Employer chooses to exempt one or
more Employees, the Employer is still
required to post a notice pursuant to
§ 826.80.
(c) Public Employers. (1) Any public
Employer must provide its Employees
Paid Sick Leave except as provided in
§ 826.30(c) through (d).
(2) Any public Employer must
provide its Eligible Employees
Expanded Family and Medical Leave,
except as provided in paragraph (c)(3) of
this section and in § 826.30(c) through
(d).
(3) The EFMLEA amended only Title
I of the FMLA, resulting in a divide in
coverage as to Employees of the United
States and of agencies of the United
States (Federal Employees). Federal
Employees covered by Title I of the
FMLA are eligible for Expanded Family
and Medical Leave. But most Federal
Employees are instead covered under
Title II of the FMLA, which was not
amended by the EFMLEA. Such Federal
Employees are not within the EFMLEA’s
purview and are therefore not eligible
for Expanded Family and Medical
Leave. The Federal Employees covered
by Title I of the FMLA are therefore
eligible for Expanded Family and
Medical Leave, subject to the limitations
and exceptions set forth in § 826.30(b)
through (d), including:
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(i) Employees of the U.S. Postal
Service;
(ii) Employees of the U.S. Postal
Regulatory Commission;
(iii) Part-time Employees who do not
have an established regular tour of duty
during the administrative workweek;
(iv) Employees serving under an
intermittent appointment or temporary
appointment with a time limitation of
one year or less;
(v) Employees of the Government
Accountability Office;
(vi) Employees of the Library of
Congress; and
(vii) Other Federal Employees not
covered by Title II of the FMLA.
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§ 826.50
Intermittent leave.
(a) General Rule. Subject to the
conditions and applicable limits, an
Employee may take Paid Sick Leave or
Expanded Family and Medical Leave
intermittently (i.e., in separate periods
of time, rather than one continuous
period) only if the Employer and
Employee agree. The Employer and
Employee may memorialize in writing
any agreement under this section, but a
clear and mutual understanding
between the parties is sufficient.
(b) Reporting to Worksite. The ability
of an Employee to take Paid Sick Leave
or Expanded Family and Medical Leave
intermittently while reporting to an
Employer’s worksite depends upon the
reason for the leave.
(1) If the Employer and Employee
agree, an Employee may take up to the
entire portion of Paid Sick Leave or
Expanded Family and Medical Leave
intermittently to care for the Employee’s
Son or Daughter whose School or Place
of Care is closed, or Child Care Provider
is unavailable, because of reasons
related to COVID–19. Under such
circumstances, intermittent Paid Sick
Leave or paid Expanded Family and
Medical Leave may be taken in any
increment of time agreed to by the
Employer and Employee.
(2) An Employee may not take Paid
Sick Leave intermittently if the leave is
taken for any of the reasons specified in
§ 826.20(a)(1)(i) through (iv) and (vi).
Once the Employee begins taking Paid
Sick Leave for one or more of such
reasons, the Employee must use the
permitted days of leave consecutively
until the Employee no longer has a
qualifying reason to take Paid Sick
Leave.
(c) Teleworking. If an Employer
directs or allows an Employee to
Telework, or the Employee normally
works from home, the Employer and
Employee may agree that the Employee
may take Paid Sick Leave for any
qualifying reason or Expanded Family
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and Medical Leave intermittently, and
in any agreed increment of time (but
only when the Employee is unavailable
to Telework because of a COVID–19
related reason).
(d) Calculation of Leave. If an
Employee takes Paid Sick Leave or
Expanded Family and Medical Leave
intermittently as the Employee and
Employer have agreed, only the amount
of leave actually taken may be counted
toward the Employee’s leave
entitlements. For example, an Employee
who normally works forty hours in a
workweek only takes three hours of
leave each work day (for a weekly total
of fifteen hours) has only taken fifteen
hours of the Employee’s Paid Sick Leave
or 37.5% of a workweek of the
Employee’s Expanded Family and
Medical Leave.
§ 826.60 Leave to care for a Child due to
School or Place of Care Closure or Child
Care unavailability—intersection between
the EPSLA and the EFMLEA.
(a) An Eligible Employee who needs
leave to care for his or her Son or
Daughter whose School or Place of Care
is closed, or whose Child Care Provider
is unavailable, due to COVID–19 related
reasons may be eligible to take leave
under both the EPSLA and the
EFMLEA. If so, the benefits provided by
the EPSLA run concurrently with those
provided under the EFMLEA.
(1) Intersection between the EPSLA
and the EFMLEA. An Eligible Employee
may take up to twelve weeks of
Expanded Family and Medical Leave to
care for his or her Son or Daughter
whose School or Place of Care has been
closed, or whose Child Care Provider is
unavailable, due to COVID–19 related
reasons.
(2) The first two weeks of leave (up to
80 hours) may be paid under the
EPSLA; the subsequent weeks are paid
under the EFMLEA.
(3) An Employee’s prior use of Paid
Sick Leave under EPSLA will impact
the amount of Paid Sick Leave that
remains available to the Employee.
(4) An Eligible Employee who has
exhausted his or her twelve workweek
FMLA entitlement, see § 826.70, is not
precluded from taking Paid Sick Leave.
(b) Supplementing Expanded Family
and Medical Leave with other accrued
Employer-provided leave.
(1) Where an Eligible Employee takes
Expanded Family and Medical Leave
after taking all or part of his or her Paid
Sick Leave for a reason other than that
provided in § 826.20(a)(1)(v), all or part
of the Eligible Employee’s first ten days
(or first two weeks) of Expanded Family
and Medical Leave may be unpaid
because the Eligible Employee will have
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19353
exhausted his or her Paid Sick Leave
entitlement.
(2) Under the circumstances in (b)(1)
of this section, the Eligible Employee
may choose to substitute earned or
accrued paid leave provided by the
Employer during this period. The term
substitute means that the preexisting
paid leave provided by the Employer,
which has been earned or accrued
pursuant to established policies of the
Employer, will run concurrently with
the unpaid Expanded Family and
Medical Leave. Accordingly, the Eligible
Employee receives pay pursuant to the
Employer’s preexisting paid leave
policy during the period of otherwise
unpaid Expanded Family and Medical
Leave.
(3) If the Eligible Employee does not
elect to substitute paid leave for unpaid
Expanded Family and Medical Leave
under the above conditions and
circumstances, the Eligible Employee
will remain entitled to any paid leave
that the Eligible Employee has earned or
accrued under the terms of his or her
Employer’s plan.
§ 826.70 Leave to care for a Child due to
School or Place of Care closure or Child
Care unavailability—intersection of the
EFMLEA and the FMLA.
(a) Certain employees are entitled to
a total of twelve workweeks of FMLA
leave in the twelve-month period
defined in § 825.200(b) of this chapter
for the following reasons:
(1) The birth of the employee’s son or
daughter, and to care for the newborn
child;
(2) The placement with the employee
of a son or daughter for adoption or
foster care, and to care for the newly
placed child;
(3) To care for the employee’s spouse,
son, daughter, or parent with a serious
health condition;
(4) Because of a serious health
condition that makes the employee
unable to perform one or more of the
essential functions of his or her job;
(5) Because of any qualifying exigency
arising out of the fact that the
employee’s spouse, son, daughter, or
parent is a military member on covered
active duty status (or has been notified
of an impending call or order to covered
active duty); and
(6) To care for the Eligible Employee’s
Son or Daughter whose School or Place
of Care is closed, or Child Care Provider
is unavailable, due to COVID–19 related
reasons.
(b) If an Eligible Employee has already
taken some FMLA leave for reasons
(a)(1) through (5) during the twelvemonth period, the Eligible Employee
may take up to the remaining portion of
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the twelve workweek leave for
Expanded Family and Medical Leave. If
an Eligible Employee has already taken
the full twelve workweeks of FMLA
leave during the twelve-month period,
the Eligible Employee may not take
Expanded Family and Medical Leave.
An Eligible Employee’s entitlement to
take up to two weeks of Paid Sick Leave
under the EPSLA is not impacted by the
Eligible Employee’s use of FMLA leave.
For example, if an Eligible Employee
used his or her full FMLA leave
entitlement for birth and bonding with
a newborn, he or she would still be
entitled to take Paid Sick Leave (for any
covered reason), but could not take
Expanded Family and Medical Leave in
the same twelve-month period if his or
her child’s day care closed due to
COVID–19 related reasons.
(c) If an Eligible Employee takes fewer
than twelve weeks of Expanded Family
and Medical Leave, the Employee may
take up to the remaining portion of the
twelve weeks FMLA leave entitlement
for reasons described in paragraphs
(a)(1) through (5) of this section. For
example, if an Eligible Employee takes
eight weeks of Expanded Family and
Medical Leave to care for his or her Son
or Daughter whose School is closed due
to COVID–19 related reasons, he or she
could take up to four workweeks of
unpaid FMLA leave for his or her own
serious health condition later in the
twelve-month period.
(d) If an employee has taken FMLA
leave to care for a covered service
member with a serious injury or illness,
the remaining FMLA leave entitlement
that may be used for Expanded Family
and Medical Leave is calculated in
accordance with § 825.127(e) of this
chapter.
(e) An Eligible Employee can take a
maximum of twelve workweeks of
Expanded Family and Medical Leave
during the period in which the leave
may be taken (April 2, 2020 to
December 31, 2020) even if that period
spans two FMLA leave twelve-month
periods. For example, if an Employer’s
twelve-month period begins on July 1,
and an Eligible Employee took seven
weeks of Expanded Family and Medical
Leave in May and June, 2020, the
Eligible Employee could only take up to
five additional weeks of Expanded
Family and Medical Leave between July
1 and December 31, 2020, even though
the first seven weeks of Expanded
Family and Medical Leave fell in the
prior twelve-month period.
(f) The first two weeks of Expanded
Family and Medical Leave may be
unpaid and the Eligible Employee may
substitute Paid Sick Leave under the
EPSLA at two-thirds the Employee’s
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regular rate of pay or accrued paid leave
provided by the Employer during this
period (see § 826.60). After the first two
weeks of leave, Expanded Family and
Medical Leave is paid at two-thirds the
Eligible Employee’s regular rate of pay,
up to $200 per day per Eligible
Employee. Because this period of
Expanded Family and Medical Leave is
not unpaid, the FMLA provision for
substitution of the Employee’s accrued
paid leave is inapplicable, and neither
the Eligible Employee nor the Employer
may require the substitution of paid
leave. However, Employers and Eligible
Employees may agree, where Federal or
state law permits, to have paid leave
supplement pay under the EFMLEA so
that the Employee receives the full
amount of his or her normal pay. For
example, an Eligible Employee and
Employer may agree to supplement the
Expanded Family and Medical Leave by
substituting one-third hour of accrued
vacation leave for each hour of
Expanded Family and Medical Leave. If
the Eligible Employee and Employer do
not agree to supplement paid leave in
the manner described above, the
Employee will remain entitled to all the
paid leave which is earned or accrued
under the terms of the Employer’s plan
for later use. This option is not available
to Federal agencies if such partial leave
payment would be contrary to a
governing statute or regulation.
§ 826.80
Employer notice.
(a) Every Employer covered by
FFCRA’s paid leave provisions is
required to post and keep posted on its
premises, in conspicuous places a
notice explaining the FFCRA’s paid
leave provisions and providing
information concerning the procedures
for filing complaints of violations of the
FFCRA with the Wage and Hour
Division.
(b) An Employer may satisfy this
requirement by emailing or direct
mailing this notice to Employees, or
posting this notice on an Employee
information internal or external website.
(c) To meet the requirements of
paragraph (a) of this section, Employers
may duplicate the text of the
Department’s model notice (WHD 1422
REV 03/20) or may use another format
so long as the information provided
includes, at a minimum, all of the
information contained in that notice.
Prototypes are available at www.dol.gov/
whd. Employers furnishing notices to
sensory-impaired individuals must also
comply with all applicable requirements
under Federal or State law.
(d) This section does not require
translation or provision of the notice in
languages other than English.
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(e) For Employers who are covered by
the EFMLEA but are not covered by the
other provisions of the FMLA, posting
of this FFCRA notice satisfies their
FMLA general notice obligation. See 29
U.S.C. 2619; § 825.300 of this chapter.
§ 826.90
leave.
Employee notice of need for
(a) Requirement to provide notice. (1)
An Employer may require an Employee
to follow reasonable notice procedures
after the first workday (or portion
thereof) for which an Employee takes
Paid Sick Leave for any reason other
than that described in § 826.20(a)(1)(v).
Whether a procedure is reasonable will
be determined under the facts and
circumstances of each particular case.
Nothing in this section precludes an
Employee from offering notice to an
Employer sooner; the Department
encourages, but does not require,
Employees to notify Employers about
their request for Paid Sick Leave or
Expanded Family and Medical Leave as
soon as practicable. If an Employee fails
to give proper notice, the Employer
should give him or her notice of the
failure and an opportunity to provide
the required documentation prior to
denying the request for leave.
(2) In any case where an Employee
requests leave in order to care for the
Employee’s Son or Daughter whose
School or Place of Care is closed, or
Child Care Provider is unavailable, due
to COVID–19 related reasons, if that
leave was foreseeable, an Employee
shall provide the Employer with notice
of such Paid Sick Leave or Expanded
Family and Medical Leave as soon as
practicable. If an Employee fails to give
proper notice, the Employer should give
him or her notice of the failure and an
opportunity to provide the required
documentation prior to denying the
request for leave.
(b) Timing and delivery of notice.
Notice may not be required in advance,
and may only be required after the first
workday (or portion thereof) for which
an Employee takes Paid Sick Leave or
Expanded Family and Medical Leave.
After the first workday, it will be
reasonable for an Employer to require
notice as soon as practicable under the
facts and circumstances of the particular
case. Generally, it will be reasonable for
notice to be given by the Employee’s
spokesperson (e.g., spouse, adult family
member, or other responsible party) if
the Employee is unable to do so
personally.
(c) Content of notice. Generally, it will
be reasonable for an Employer to require
oral notice and sufficient information
for an Employer to determine whether
the requested leave is covered by the
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EPSLA or the EFMLEA. An Employer
may not require the notice to include
documentation beyond what is allowed
by § 826.100.
(d) Complying with Employer policy.
Generally, it will be reasonable for the
Employer to require the Employee to
comply with the Employer’s usual and
customary notice and procedural
requirements for requesting leave,
absent unusual circumstances.
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§ 826.100
leave.
Documentation of need for
(a) An Employee is required to
provide the Employer documentation
containing the following information
prior to taking Paid Sick Leave under
the EPSLA or Expanded Family and
Medical Leave under the EFMLEA:
(1) Employee’s name;
(2) Date(s) for which leave is
requested;
(3) Qualifying reason for the leave;
and
(4) Oral or written statement that the
Employee is unable to work because of
the qualified reason for leave.
(b) To take Paid Sick Leave for a
qualifying COVID–19 related reason
under § 826.20(a)(1)(i), an Employee
must additionally provide the Employer
with the name of the government entity
that issued the Quarantine or Isolation
Order.
(c) To take Paid Sick Leave for a
qualifying COVID–19 related reason
under § 826.20(a)(1)(ii) an Employee
must additionally provide the Employer
with the name of the health care
provider who advised the Employee to
self-quarantine due to concerns related
to COVID–19.
(d) To take Paid Sick Leave for a
qualifying COVID–19 related reason
under § 826.20(a)(1)(iii) an Employee
must additionally provide the Employer
with either:
(1) The name of the government entity
that issued the Quarantine or Isolation
Order to which the individual being
care for is subject; or
(2) The name of the health care
provider who advised the individual
being cared for to self-quarantine due to
concerns related to COVID–19.
(e) To take Paid Sick Leave for a
qualifying COVID–19 related reason
under § 826.20(a)(1)(v) or Expanded
Family and Medical Leave, an Employee
must additionally provide:
(1) The name of the Son or Daughter
being cared for;
(2) The name of the School, Place of
Care, or Child Care Provider that has
closed or become unavailable; and
(3) A representation that no other
suitable person will be caring for the
Son or Daughter during the period for
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which the Employee takes Paid Sick
Leave or Expanded Family and Medical
Leave.
(f) The Employer may also request an
Employee to provide such additional
material as needed for the Employer to
support a request for tax credits
pursuant to the FFCRA. The Employer
is not required to provide leave if
materials sufficient to support the
applicable tax credit have not been
provided. For more information, please
consult https://www.irs.gov/newsroom/
covid-19-related-tax-credits-forrequired-paid-leave-provided-by-smalland-midsize-businesses-faqs.
§ 826.110
Health care coverage.
(a) While an Employee is taking Paid
Sick Leave or Expanded Family and
Medical Leave, an Employer must
maintain the Employee’s coverage under
any group health plan (as defined in the
Internal Revenue Code of 1986 at 26
U.S.C. 5000(b)(1)) on the same
conditions as coverage would have been
provided if the Employee had been
continuously employed during the
entire leave period. All Employers
covered by the EPSLA or the EFMLEA
are subject to the requirement to
maintain health coverage. The term
‘‘group health plan’’ has the same
meaning as under the FMLA (see
§ 825.102 of this chapter). Maintenance
of individual health insurance policies
purchased by an Employee from an
insurance provider, as described in
§ 825.209(a) of this chapter, is the
responsibility of the Employee.
(b) The same group health plan
benefits provided to an Employee prior
to taking Paid Sick Leave or Expanded
Family and Medical Leave must be
maintained while an Employee is taking
Paid Sick Leave or Expanded Family
and Medical Leave. For example, if
family member coverage is provided to
an Employee, family member coverage
must be maintained while an Employee
is taking Paid Sick Leave or Expanded
Family and Medical Leave. Similarly,
benefit coverage for medical care,
surgical care, hospital care, dental care,
eye care, mental health counseling,
substance abuse treatment, etc., must be
maintained while an Employee is taking
Paid Sick Leave or Expanded Family
and Medical Leave if provided in an
Employer’s group health plan, including
a supplement to a group health plan,
whether or not provided through a
flexible spending account or other
component of a cafeteria plan.
(c) If an Employer provides a new
health plan or benefits or changes health
benefits or plans while an Employee is
taking Paid Sick Leave or Expanded
Family and Medical Leave, the
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19355
Employee is entitled to the new or
changed plan/benefits to the same
extent as if the Employee was not on
leave. Any other plan changes (e.g., in
coverage, premiums, deductibles, etc.)
which apply to all Employees of the
workforce would also apply to
Employees taking Paid Sick Leave or
Expanded Family and Medical Leave.
(d) Notice of any opportunity to
change plans or benefits must also be
given to an Employee taking Paid Sick
Leave or Expanded Family and Medical
Leave. If the Employee requests the
changed coverage, the Employer must
provide it.
(e) An Employee remains responsible
for paying his or her portion of group
health plan premiums which had been
paid by the Employee prior to taking
Paid Sick Leave or Expanded Family
and Medical Leave. If premiums are
raised or lowered, the Employee would
be required to pay the new Employee
premium contribution on the same
terms as other Employees. The
Employee’s share of premiums must be
paid by the method normally used
during any paid leave, presumably as a
payroll deduction. If leave is unpaid, or
the Employee’s pay during leave is
insufficient to cover the Employee’s
share of the premiums, the Employer
may obtain payment from the Employee
in accordance with § 825.210(c) of this
chapter.
(f) An Employee may choose not to
retain group health plan coverage while
an Employee is taking Paid Sick Leave
or Expanded Family and Medical Leave.
However, when an Employee returns
from leave, the Employee is entitled to
be reinstated on the same terms as prior
to taking the leave, including family or
dependent coverages, without any
additional qualifying period, physical
examination, exclusion of pre-existing
conditions, etc.
(g) Except as required by the
Consolidated Omnibus Budget
Reconciliation Act of 1986 (COBRA), an
Employer’s obligation to maintain
health benefits while an Employee is
taking Paid Sick Leave or Expanded
Family and Medical Leave ceases under
this section if and when the
employment relationship would have
terminated if the Employee had not
taken Paid Sick Leave or Expanded
Family and Medical Leave (e.g., if the
Employee fails to return from leave, or
if the entitlement to leave ceases
because an Employer closes its
business).
§ 826.120
Multiemployer plans.
(a) Paid Sick Leave. In accordance
with its existing collective bargaining
obligations, an Employer signatory to a
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multiemployer collective bargaining
agreement may satisfy its obligations to
provide Paid Sick Leave by making
contributions to a multiemployer fund,
plan, or other program. Such
contributions must be based on the
hours of Paid Sick Leave to which each
Employee is entitled under the EPSLA
according to each Employee’s work
under the multi-employer collective
bargaining agreement.
(b) Expanded Family and Medical
Leave. In accordance with its existing
collective bargaining obligations, an
Employer signatory to a multiemployer
collective bargaining agreement may
satisfy its obligations to provide
Expanded Family and Medical Leave by
making contributions to a
multiemployer fund, plan, or other
program. Such contributions must be
based on the hours of paid family and
medical leave to which each Eligible
Employee is entitled under the
EFMLEA, according to each Eligible
Employee’s work under the
multiemployer collective bargaining
agreement.
(c) Employee access. Any
multiemployer fund, plan, or program
under section (a) or (b) of this section
must enable or otherwise allow
Employees to secure payments for Paid
Sick Leave or Expanded Family and
Medical Leave. If the multiemployer
fund, plan, or program does not enable
or otherwise allow Employees to secure
payments for paid leave to which they
are entitled under the FFCRA based on
their work under the multiemployer
collective bargaining agreement, the
multiemployer fund, plan, or program
does not satisfy the requirements of the
FFCRA.
(d) Alternative means of compliance.
In accordance with its existing
collective bargaining obligations, an
Employer signatory to a multiemployer
collective bargaining agreement may
satisfy its obligations to provide Paid
Sick Leave under the EPSLA or
Expanded Family and Medical Leave
under the EFMLEA by means other than
those set forth in paragraph (a) and (b)
of this section, provided such means are
consistent with its existing bargaining
obligations and any applicable
collective bargaining agreement.
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§ 826.130
(1) An Employee is not protected from
employment actions, such as layoffs,
that would have affected the Employee
regardless of whether he or she took
leave. In order to deny restoration to
employment, an Employer must be able
to show that an Employee would not
otherwise have been employed at the
time reinstatement is requested in order
to deny restoration to employment.
(2) For leave taken under the
EFMLEA, an Employer may deny job
restoration to key Eligible Employees, as
defined under the FMLA (§ 825.217 of
this chapter), if such denial is necessary
to prevent substantial and grievous
economic injury to the operations of the
Employer.
(3) An Employer who employs fewer
than twenty-five Eligible Employees
may deny job restoration to an Eligible
Employee who has taken Expanded
Family and Medical Leave if all four of
the following conditions exist:
(i) The Eligible Employee took leave
to care for his or her Son or Daughter
whose School or Place of Care was
closed, or whose Child Care Provider
was unavailable, for COVID–19 related
reasons;
(ii) The position held by the Eligible
Employee when the leave commenced
does not exist due to economic
conditions or other changes in operating
conditions of the Employer that affect
employment and are caused by a Public
Health Emergency during the period of
leave;
(iii) The Employer makes reasonable
efforts to restore the Eligible Employee
to a position equivalent to the position
the Eligible Employee held when the
leave commenced, with equivalent
employment benefits, pay, and other
terms and conditions of employment;
and
(iv) Where the reasonable efforts of
the Employer to restore the Eligible
Employee to an equivalent position fail,
the Employer makes reasonable efforts
to contact the Eligible Employee during
a one-year period, if an equivalent
position becomes available. The oneyear period begins on the earlier of the
date the leave related to a Public Health
Emergency concludes or the date twelve
weeks after the Eligible Employee’s
leave began.
Return to work.
(a) General rule. On return from Paid
Sick Leave or Expanded Family and
Medical Leave, an Employee has a right
to be restored to the same or an
equivalent position in accordance with
§§ 825.214 and 825.215 of this chapter.
(b) Restoration limitations.
Notwithstanding paragraph (a) of this
section:
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§ 826.140
Recordkeeping.
(a) An Employer is required to retain
all documentation provided pursuant to
§ 826.100 for four years, regardless
whether leave was granted or denied. If
an Employee provided oral statements
to support his or her request for Paid
Sick Leave or Expanded Family and
Medical Leave, the Employer is required
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to document and maintain such
information in its records for four years.
(b) An Employer that denies an
Employee’s request for Paid Sick Leave
or Expanded Family and Medical Leave
pursuant to § 826.40(b) shall document
the determination by its authorized
officer that it is eligible for such
exemption and retain such
documentation for four years.
(c) In order to claim tax credits from
the Internal Revenue Service (IRS), an
Employer is advised to maintain the
following records for four years:
(1) Documentation to show how the
Employer determined the amount of
paid sick leave and expanded family
and medical leave paid to Employees
that are eligible for the credit, including
records of work, Telework and Paid Sick
Leave and Expanded Family and
Medical Leave;
(2) Documentation to show how the
Employer determined the amount of
qualified health plan expenses that the
Employer allocated to wages;
(3) Copies of any completed IRS
Forms 7200 that the Employer
submitted to the IRS;
(4) Copies of the completed IRS Forms
941 that the Employer submitted to the
IRS or, for Employers that use third
party payers to meet their employment
tax obligations, records of information
provided to the third party payer
regarding the Employer’s entitlement to
the credit claimed on IRS Form 941, and
(5) Other documents needed to
support its request for tax credits
pursuant to IRS applicable forms,
instructions, and information for the
procedures that must be followed to
claim a tax credit. For more information,
please consult https://www.irs.gov/
newsroom/covid-19-related-tax-creditsfor-required-paid-leave-provided-bysmall-and-midsize-businesses-faqs.
§ 826.150 Prohibited acts and enforcement
under the EPSLA.
(a) Prohibited acts. An Employer is
prohibited from discharging,
disciplining, or discriminating against
any Employee because such Employee
took Paid Sick Leave under the EPSLA.
Likewise, an Employer is prohibited
from discharging, disciplining, or
discriminating against any Employee
because such Employee has filed any
complaint or instituted or caused to be
instituted any proceeding, including an
enforcement proceeding, under or
related to the EPSLA, or has testified or
is about to testify in any such
proceeding.
(b) Enforcement. (1) Failure to provide
Paid Sick Leave. An Employer who fails
to provide its Employee Paid Sick Leave
under the EPSLA is considered to have
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Federal Register / Vol. 85, No. 66 / Monday, April 6, 2020 / Rules and Regulations
failed to pay the minimum wage as
required by section 6 of the FLSA, 29
U.S.C. 206, and shall be subject to the
enforcement provisions set forth in
sections 16 and 17 of the FLSA, 29
U.S.C. 216, 217.
(2) Discharge, discipline, or
discrimination. An Employer who
discharges, disciplines, or discriminates
against an Employee in the manner
described in subsection (a) is considered
to have violated section 15(a)(3) of the
FLSA, 29 U.S.C. 215(a)(3), and shall be
subject to the enforcement provisions
relevant to such violations set forth in
sections 16 and 17 of the FLSA, 29
U.S.C. 216, 217.
§ 826.151 Prohibited acts and enforcement
under the EFMLEA.
(a) Prohibited acts. The prohibitions
against interference with the exercise of
rights, discrimination, and interference
with proceedings or inquiries described
in the FMLA, 29 U.S.C. 2615, apply to
Employers with respect to Eligible
Employees taking, or attempting to take,
leave under the EFMLEA.
(b) Enforcement. An Employer who
commits a prohibited act described in
paragraph (a) of this section shall be
subject to the enforcement provisions
set forth in section 107 of the FMLA, 29
U.S.C. 2617, and § 825.400 of this
chapter, except that an Eligible
Employee may file a private action to
enforce the EFMLEA only if the
Employer is otherwise subject to the
FMLA in the absence of EFMLEA.
§ 826.152 Filing a complaint with the
Federal Government.
A complaint alleging any violation of
the EPSLA and/or the EFMLEA may be
filed in person, by mail, or by
telephone, with the Wage and Hour
Division, U.S. Department of Labor,
including at any local office of the Wage
and Hour Division. No particular form
of complaint is required, except that a
complaint must be in writing and
should include a full statement of the
acts and/or omissions, with pertinent
dates, that are believed to constitute the
violation.
jbell on DSKJLSW7X2PROD with RULES3
§ 826.153 Investigative authority of the
Secretary.
(a) Investigative authority under the
EPSLA. For purposes of the EPSLA, the
Secretary has the investigative authority
and subpoena authority set forth in
sections 9 and 11 of the FLSA, 29 U.S.C.
209, 211.
(b) Investigative authority under the
EFMLEA. For purposes of EFMLEA, the
Secretary has the investigative authority
set forth in section 106(a) of the FMLA,
29 U.S.C. 2616(a), and the subpoena
VerDate Sep<11>2014
19:57 Apr 03, 2020
Jkt 250001
authority set forth in section 106(d) of
the FMLA, 29 U.S.C. 2616(d).
§ 826.160 Effect on other laws, employer
practices, and collective bargaining
agreements.
(a) No diminishment of other rights or
benefits. (1) An Employee’s entitlement
to, or actual use of, Paid Sick Leave
under the EPSLA is in addition to—and
shall not in any way diminish, reduce,
or eliminate—any other right or benefit,
including regarding Paid Sick Leave, to
which the Employee is entitled under
any of the following:
(i) Another Federal, State, or local
law, except the FMLA as provided in
§ 826.70;
(ii) A collective bargaining agreement;
or
(iii) An Employer policy that existed
prior to April 1, 2020.
(2) That an Employee already used
any type of leave prior to April 1, 2020,
for reasons related to COVID–19 or
otherwise, shall not be grounds for his
or her Employer to deny him or her Paid
Sick Leave and Expanded Family and
Medical Leave or for the Employer to
delay or postpone the Employee’s use of
Paid Sick Leave and Expanded Family
and Medical Leave. The foregoing is
subject to the exception of FMLA leave
as provided in § 826.70. An Employer
shall permit an Employee to
immediately use the Paid Sick Leave
and Expanded Family and Medical
Leave to which he or she is entitled
under the EPSLA and the EFMLEA.
However, no Employer is obligated or
required to provide, and no Employee
has a right or entitlement to receive, any
retroactive reimbursement or financial
compensation through Paid Sick Leave
or Expanded Family and Medical Leave
for any unpaid or partially paid leave
taken prior to April 1, 2020, even if such
leave was taken for COVID–19-reated
reasons.
(b) Sequencing of Paid Sick Leave. (1)
An Employee may first use Paid Sick
Leave before using any other leave to
which he or she is entitled by any:
(i) Other Federal, State, or local law;
(ii) Collective bargaining agreement;
or
(iii) Employer policy that existed
prior to April 1, 2020.
(2) No Employer may require, coerce,
or unduly influence any Employee to
first use any other paid leave to which
the Employee is entitled before the
Employee uses Paid Sick Leave. Nor
may an Employer require, coerce, or
unduly influence an Employee to use
any source or type of unpaid leave prior
to taking Paid Sick Leave.
(c) Sequencing of Expanded Family
and Medical Leave. (1) Consistent with
PO 00000
Frm 00033
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 9990
19357
section 102(d)(2)(B) of the FMLA, 29
U.S.C. 2612(d)(2)(B), an Eligible
Employee may elect to use, or an
Employer may require that an Eligible
Employee use, provided or accrued
leave available to the Eligible Employee
for the purpose set forth in § 826.20(b)
under the Employer’s policies, such as
vacation or personal leave or paid time
off, concurrently with Expanded Family
and Medical Leave.
(2) If an Eligible Employee elects, or
an Employer requires, concurrent leave,
the Employer must pay the Eligible
Employee the full amount to which the
Eligible Employee is entitled under the
Employer’s preexisting paid leave
policy for the period of leave taken.
(d) No creation of requirements upon
end of employment. An Employer has
no obligation to provide—and an
Employee or former Employee has no
right or entitlement to receive—
financial compensation or other
reimbursement for unused Paid Sick
Leave or Expanded Family and Medical
Leave upon the Employee’s termination,
resignation, retirement, or any other
separation from employment.
(e) No creation of requirements upon
expiration. An Employer has no
obligation to provide—and an Employee
or former Employee has no right or
entitlement to receive—financial
compensation or other reimbursement
for unused Paid Sick Leave or Expanded
Family and Medical Leave upon the
expiration of the FFCRA on December
31, 2020.
(f) One time use. Any person is
limited to a total of 80 hours Paid Sick
Leave. An Employee who has taken all
such leave and then changes Employers
is not entitled to additional Paid Sick
Leave from his or her new Employer. An
Employee who has taken some, but
fewer than 80 hours of Paid Sick Leave,
and then changes Employers is entitled
only to the remaining portion of such
leave from his or her new Employer and
only if his or her new Employer is
covered by the Emergency Paid Sick
Leave Act. Such an Employee’s Paid
Sick Leave would expire upon reaching
80 hours of Paid Sick Leave total,
regardless of the Employer providing it,
or when the Employee reaches the
number of hours of Paid Sick Leave to
which he or she is entitled based on a
part-time schedule with the new
Employer.
[FR Doc. 2020–07237 Filed 4–2–20; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 4510–27–P
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Agencies
[Federal Register Volume 85, Number 66 (Monday, April 6, 2020)]
[Rules and Regulations]
[Pages 19326-19357]
From the Federal Register Online via the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
[FR Doc No: 2020-07237]
[[Page 19325]]
Vol. 85
Monday,
No. 66
April 6, 2020
Part IV
Department of Labor
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Wage and Hour Division
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29 CFR Part 826
Paid Leave Under the Families First Coronavirus Response Act; Temporary
Rule
Federal Register / Vol. 85 , No. 66 / Monday, April 6, 2020 / Rules
and Regulations
[[Page 19326]]
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DEPARTMENT OF LABOR
Wage and Hour Division
29 CFR Part 826
RIN 1235-AA35
Paid Leave Under the Families First Coronavirus Response Act
AGENCY: Wage and Hour Division, Department of Labor.
ACTION: Temporary rule.
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
SUMMARY: The Secretary of Labor (``Secretary'') is promulgating
temporary regulations to implement public health emergency leave under
Title I of the Family and Medical Leave Act (FMLA), and emergency paid
sick leave to assist working families facing public health emergencies
arising out of Coronavirus Disease 2019 (COVID-19) global pandemic. The
leave is created by a time-limited statutory authority established
under the Families First Coronavirus Response Act, Public Law 116-127
(FFCRA), and is set to expire on December 31, 2020. The FFCRA and this
temporary rule do not affect the FMLA after December 31, 2020.
DATES: This rule is effective from April 2, 2020, through December 31,
2020. This rule became operational on April 1, 2020.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: Amy DeBisschop, Director, Division of
Regulations, Legislation, and Interpretation, Wage and Hour Division,
U.S. Department of Labor, Room S-3502, 200 Constitution Avenue NW,
Washington, DC 20210, telephone: (202) 693-0406 (this is not a toll-
free number).
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
I. Executive Summary
II. Background
A. Emergency Paid Sick Leave Act (EPSLA)
B. Emergency Family and Medical Leave Expansion Act (EFMLEA)
III. Discussion
A. General
B. Paid Leave Entitlements
C. Employee Eligibility
D. Employer Coverage
E. Intermittent Leave
F. Leave To Care for a Child Due to School or Place of Care
Closure or Child Care Unavailability--Interaction Between the EPSLA
and the EFMLEA
G. Leave To Care for a Child Due to School or Place of Care
Closure or Child Care Unavailability--Interaction Between the EFMLEA
and the FMLA
H. Employer Notice
I. Employee Notice of Need for Leave
J. Documentation of Need for Leave
K. Health Care Coverage
L. Multiemployer Plans
M. Return to Work
N. Recordkeeping
O. Prohibited Acts and Enforcement
P. Effect of Other Laws, Employer Practices, and Collective
Bargaining Agreements
IV. Statutory and Regulatory Requirements
A. Administrative Procedure Act
B. Executive Order 12866, Regulatory Planning and Review; and
Executive Order 13563, Improved Regulation and Regulatory Review
C. Regulatory Flexibility Act
D. Unfunded Mandates Reform Act of 1995
E. Executive Order 13132 (Federalism)
F. Indian Tribal Governments
G. Paperwork Reduction Act
I. Executive Summary
On March 18, 2020, President Trump signed into law the FFCRA, which
creates two new emergency paid leave requirements in response to the
COVID-19 global pandemic. Division E of the FFCRA, ``The Emergency Paid
Sick Leave Act'' (EPSLA), entitles certain employees to take up to two
weeks of paid sick leave. Division C of the FFCRA, ``The Emergency
Family and Medical Leave Expansion Act'' (EFMLEA), which amends Title I
of the Family and Medical Leave Act, 29 U.S.C. 2601 et seq. (FMLA),
permits certain employees to take up to twelve weeks of expanded family
and medical leave, ten of which are paid, for specified reasons related
to COVID-19. On March 27, 2020, President Trump signed into law the
Coronavirus Aid, Relief, and Economic Security Act, Public Law 116-136
(CARES Act), which amends certain provisions of the EPSLA and the
provisions of the FMLA added by the EFMLEA.
In general, the FFCRA requires covered employers to provide
eligible employees up to two weeks of paid sick leave at full pay, up
to a specified cap, when the employee is unable to work because the
employee is subject to a Federal, State, or local quarantine or
isolation order related to COVID-19, has been advised by a health care
provider to self-quarantine due to concerns related to COVID-19, or is
experiencing COVID-19 symptoms and seeking a medical diagnosis. The
FFCRA also provides up to two weeks of paid sick leave at partial pay,
up to a specified cap, when an employee is unable to work because of a
need to care for an individual subject to a Federal, State, or local
quarantine or isolation order related to COVID-19 or who has been
advised by a health care provider to self-quarantine due to concerns
related to COVID-19; because of a need to care for the employee's son
or daughter whose school or place of care is closed, or whose child
care provider is unavailable, due to COVID-19 related reasons; or
because the employee is experiencing a substantially similar condition,
as specified by the Secretary of Health and Human Services. The FFCRA
also requires covered employers to provide up to twelve weeks of
expanded family and medical leave, up to ten weeks of which must be
paid at partial pay, up to a specified cap, when an eligible employee
is unable to work because of a need to care for the employee's son or
daughter whose school or place of care is closed, or whose child care
provider is unavailable, due to COVID-19 related reasons.
The FFCRA covers private employers with fewer than 500 employees
and certain public employers. Small employers with fewer than 50
employees may qualify for an exemption from the requirement to provide
paid leave due to school, place of care, or child care provider
closings or unavailability, if the leave payments would jeopardize the
viability of their business as a going concern.
Under the FFCRA, covered private employers qualify for
reimbursement through refundable tax credits as administered by the
Department of the Treasury, for all qualifying paid sick leave wages
and qualifying family and medical leave wages paid to an employee who
takes leave under the FFCRA, up to per diem and aggregate caps, and for
allocable costs related to the maintenance of health care coverage
under any group health plan while the employee is on the leave provided
under the FFCRA. For information on the tax credits, see https://www.irs.gov/forms-pubs/about-form-7200 see also https://www.irs.gov/pub/irs-drop/n-20-21.pdf. For more information on the COVID-19 related
small business loans, see https://www.sba.gov/page/coronavirus-covid-19-small-business-guidance-loan-resources.
The CARES Act amended the FFCRA by providing certain technical
corrections, as well as clarifying the caps for payment of leave;
expanded family and medical leave to certain employees who were laid
off or terminated after March 1, 2020, but are reemployed by the same
employer prior to December 31, 2020; and provided authority to the
Director of the Office of Management and Budget (OMB) to exclude
certain Federal employees from paid sick leave and expanded family and
medical leave.
The FFCRA grants authority to the Secretary to issue regulations
for certain purposes. In particular, sections 3102(b), as amended by
section 3611(7) of the CARES Act, and 5111(3) of the FFCRA grant the
Secretary authority to issue regulations ``as necessary, to carry
[[Page 19327]]
out the purposes of this Act, including to ensure consistency'' between
the EPSLA and the EFMLEA. The Department is issuing this temporary rule
to carry out the purposes of the FFCRA. These new paid sick leave and
expanded family and medical leave requirements became operational on
April 1, 2020, effective on April 2, 2020, and will expire on December
31, 2020.
Pursuant to the Congressional Review Act (5 U.S.C. 801 et seq.),
the Office of Information and Regulatory Affairs (OIRA) designated this
rule as a ``major rule'', as defined by 5 U.S.C. 804(2).
II. Background
A. Emergency Paid Sick Leave Act (EPSLA)
The EPSLA requires employers to provide paid sick leave to
employees who are unable to work for six reasons having to do with
COVID-19 where the employee (1) is subject to a Federal, State, or
local quarantine or isolation order related to COVID-19; (2) has been
advised by a health care provider to self-quarantine due to concerns
related to COVID-19; (3) is experiencing symptoms of COVID-19 and is
seeking a medical diagnosis; (4) is caring for an individual who is
subject to an order as described in (1), or who has been advised as
described in (2); (5) is caring for his or her son or daughter whose
school or place of care has been closed or whose child care provider is
unavailable due to COVID-19 related reasons; or (6) is experiencing any
other substantially similar condition specified by the Secretary of
Health and Human Services in consultation with the Secretary of the
Treasury and the Secretary of Labor.
Private employers with fewer than 500 employees, as well as public
agencies with one or more employees, must comply with the EPSLA,
although the Secretary has authority to exempt by rulemaking certain
employers with fewer than 50 employees from providing paid sick leave
to an employee who is unable to work because the employee is caring for
his or her son or daughter whose school or place of care has been
closed or whose child care provider is unavailable due to COVID-19
related reasons when compliance with this requirement would
``jeopardize the viability of the business as a going concern.'' FFCRA
sections 5100(2)(B)(i)-(ii), 5111(2). The EPSLA applies to employees of
covered employers regardless of how long an employee has worked for an
employer, except that employers may exclude employees who are health
care providers or emergency responders from taking paid sick leave;
similarly, the Secretary has the authority to exclude by rulemaking
``certain health care providers and emergency responders'' from the
requirements of the EPSLA. FFCRA sections 5102(a), 5102(e)(1), 5111(1).
The CARES Act also added certain exemptions that may apply to Federal
employers and employees, which are discussed below.
The EPSLA entitles full-time covered employees to up to 80 hours of
paid sick leave, and generally entitles part-time employees to up to
the number of hours that they work on average over a two-week period,
although special rules may apply to part-time employees with varying
schedules. For an employee who takes paid sick leave because he or she
is subject to a quarantine or isolation order, has been advised to
self-quarantine by a health care provider, or is experiencing symptoms
of COVID-19 and is seeking a medical diagnosis, the EPSLA provides for
paid sick leave at the greater of the employee's regular rate of pay
under section 7(e) of the Fair Labor Standards Act of 1938, as amended,
29 U.S.C. 201 et seq. (FLSA) (29 U.S.C. 207(e)), or the applicable
minimum wage (federal, state, or local), up to $511 per day and $5,110
in the aggregate. An employee who takes paid sick leave for any other
qualifying reason under the EPSLA is entitled to be paid two-thirds of
that amount, up to $200 per day and $2,000 in the aggregate. An
employer may not require an employee to use other paid leave provided
by the employer before the employee uses the paid sick leave, nor may
an employer require the employee involved to search for or find a
replacement employee to cover the hours during which the employee is
using paid sick leave.
The EPSLA also provides that employers who fail to provide paid
sick leave as required are considered to have failed to pay minimum
wages in violation of section 6 of the FLSA, and that such employers
are subject to enforcement proceedings described in sections 16 and 17
of the FLSA. 29 U.S.C. 206, 216, 217. In addition, the EPSLA prohibits
employers from discharging, disciplining, or in any other manner
discriminating against an employee who takes paid sick leave under the
EPSLA, files any complaint under or relating to the EPSLA, institutes
any proceeding under or relating to the EPSLA, or testifies in any such
proceeding. See FFCRA section 5104, as amended by CARES Act section
3611(8). Employers who violate this prohibition are considered to have
violated section 15(a)(3) of the FLSA, and are subject to the penalties
described in sections 216 and 217 of the FLSA. 29 U.S.C. 215(a)(3),
216, 217. The EPSLA also authorizes the Secretary to investigate and
gather data to ensure compliance with the EPSLA in the same manner as
authorized by sections 9 and 11 of the FLSA, and the CARES Act section
3611(9) (adding FFCRA section 5105(c)); 29 U.S.C. 209, 211.
The EPSLA requires employers to post a notice of employees' rights
under the EPSLA. It permits, but does not require, employers who are
signatories to multiemployer collective bargaining agreements to
fulfill their obligations under the EPSLA by making contributions to a
multiemployer fund, plan, or program, subject to certain requirements.
Nothing in the EPSLA diminishes the rights or benefits that an employee
is entitled to under any other Federal, State, or local law; collective
bargaining agreement; or existing employer policy. Moreover, the EPSLA
does not require financial or other reimbursement by an employer to an
employee for unused paid sick leave upon the employee's separation from
employment.
B. Emergency Family and Medical Leave Expansion Act (EFMLEA)
The EFMLEA requires employers to provide expanded paid family and
medical leave to eligible employees who are unable to work because the
employee is caring for his or her son or daughter whose school or place
of care is closed or whose child care provider is unavailable due to a
public health emergency, defined as an emergency with respect to COVID-
19, declared by a Federal, State, or local authority.
The EFMLEA applies to different sets of employers and employees
from the other provisions of the FMLA. Private employers with fewer
than 500 employees must comply with the EFMLEA, although the Secretary
has the authority to exempt by rulemaking employers with fewer than 50
employees from EFMLEA's requirements when compliance with the EFMLEA
would ``jeopardize the viability of the business as a going concern.''
FFCRA section 3102(b) (adding FMLA section 110(a)(1)(B), (3)(B)).
Generally, public agencies as defined at Sec. 826.10(a) must comply
with the EFMLEA. As it relates to the Federal government, however, only
those Federal employees covered by Title I of the FMLA are potentially
eligible under the EFMLEA. 29 U.S.C. 2611(2)(B)(i). The EFMLEA applies
to employees of covered employers if such employees have been employed
by the employer for at least 30 calendar days. This includes employees
who were laid off or
[[Page 19328]]
otherwise terminated on or after March 1, 2020, had worked for the
employer for at least thirty of the prior 60 calendar days, and were
subsequently rehired or otherwise reemployed by the same employer.
CARES Act section 3605 (amending FMLA section 110(a)(1)(A)). As with
the EPSLA, employers may, however, exclude employees who are health
care providers or emergency responders from taking expanded family and
medical leave, and similarly, the Secretary has the authority to
exclude by rulemaking ``certain health care providers and emergency
responders'' from the requirements of the EFMLEA.
An employee is entitled to take up to twelve weeks of leave for the
purpose described in the EFMLEA. 29 U.S.C. 2611(a)(1). The first two
weeks (usually ten workdays) of this leave are unpaid, though an
employee may substitute paid sick leave under the EPSLA or paid leave
under the employer's preexisting policies for these two weeks of unpaid
leave. Unlike FMLA leave taken for other reasons, the following period
of up to ten weeks of expanded family and medical leave must be paid.
Specifically, after the first two weeks of leave, expanded family and
medical leave under the FFCRA must be paid at two-thirds the employee's
regular rate of pay. For each day of leave, the employee receives
compensation based on the number of hours he or she would otherwise be
normally scheduled to work, although special rules may apply to
employees with varying schedules. An eligible employee may elect to
use, or an employer may require that an employee use, such expanded
family and medical leave concurrently with any leave offered under the
employer's policies that would be available for the employee to take to
care for his or her child, such as vacation or personal leave or paid
time off. The total EFMLEA payment per employee for this ten-week
period is capped at $200 per day and $10,000 in the aggregate, for a
total of no more than $12,000 when combined with two weeks of paid
leave taken under the EPSLA.
The EFMLEA provides that if the need for expanded family and
medical leave is foreseeable, employees shall provide employers with
notice of the leave as soon as practicable. The EFMLEA defines
conditions under which employees who take leave are entitled to be
restored to their positions, while exempting employers with fewer than
twenty-five employees from this requirement under certain
circumstances. The FMLA's general prohibitions on interference with
rights and discrimination, 29 U.S.C. 2615, as well as the FMLA's
enforcement provisions, 29 U.S.C. 2617, apply for purposes of the
EFMLEA, except that an employee's right to file a lawsuit directly
against an employer does not extend to employers who were not
previously covered by the FMLA.
The EFMLEA permits, but does not require, employers who are
signatories to multiemployer collective bargaining agreements to
fulfill their obligations under the EFMLEA by making contributions to a
multiemployer fund, plan, or program, subject to certain requirements.
III. Discussion
The paid leave requirements of the EPSLA and the EFMLEA are
described and interpreted by the Secretary in regulations to appear in
new Part 826 of Title 29 of the Code of Federal Regulations, and
addressed below.
A. General
Section 826.10 contains definitions of terms used in the EPSLA and
the EFMLEA as well as in this rule. As a general matter, the FMLA
definitions apply to the EFMLEA unless specific definitions were
included in the EFMLEA. The majority of the terms found in the EPSLA
and the EFMLEA are based on terms that are defined in other statutes
and/or their implementing regulations, such as the FLSA. For example,
the EPSLA expressly adopts the definition of ``person'' from the FLSA
and the definition of ``son or daughter'' from the FMLA.
The EFMLEA defines ``qualifying need related to a public health
emergency'' as a need for leave ``to care for the son or daughter under
18 years of age of such employee if the school or place of care has
been closed, or the child care provider of such son or daughter is
unavailable, due to a public health emergency.'' FFCRA section 3102(b)
(adding FMLA section 110(a)(1)(A)). This definition could be read to
narrow the FMLA definition of ``son or daughter'' for purposes of
expanded family and medical leave, as the FMLA expressly includes
children 18 years of age or older and incapable of self-care because of
a mental or physical disability. 29 U.S.C. 2611(12). The EFMLEA does
not contain a definition of ``son or daughter,'' however, and therefore
the FMLA definition of that term applies to expanded family and medical
leave. The EPSLA also adopts the FMLA definition of ``son or
daughter.'' As addressed more fully below in the discussion of Sec.
826.20, the Department believes it would create needless confusion and
complication to have different rules under the EFMLEA and the EPSLA for
when an employee may take leave to care for his or her son or daughter
whose school or place of care is closed or child care provider is
unavailable due to COVID-19 related reasons. The Department is
therefore treating the definitions as the same (i.e., to include
children under 18 years of age and children age 18 or older who are
incapable of self-care because of a mental or physical disability),
pursuant to its statutory authority to issue regulations to ensure
consistency between the EPSLA and the EFMLEA.
Only one other definition in the FFCRA--``telework''--bears further
discussion here. Section 826.10 defines the word broadly to effectuate
the statute's underlying purposes and also outlines when an employee is
able to telework. The definition also clarifies that telework is no
less work than if it were performed at an employer's worksite. As a
result, employees who are teleworking for COVID-19 related reasons must
always record--and be compensated for--all hours actually worked,
including overtime, in accordance with the requirements of the FLSA.
See 29 CFR 785.11-13; 785.48; see also 29 U.S.C. 206, 207; 29 CFR part
778. However, an employer is not required to compensate employees for
unreported hours worked while teleworking for COVID-19 related reasons,
unless the employer knew or should have known about such telework. See,
e.g., Allen v. City of Chicago, 865 F.3d 936 (7th Cir. 2017), cert.
denied, 138 S. Ct. 1302, 200 L. Ed. 2d 474 (2018). While the
Department's regulations and interpretations of the FLSA generally
apply to employees who are teleworking for COVID-19 related reasons,
the Department has concluded that Sec. 790.6 and its continuous
workday guidance are inconsistent with the objectives of the FFCRA and
CARES Act only with respect to such employees.
The FFCRA and these regulations encourage employers and employees
to implement highly flexible telework arrangements that allow employees
to perform work, potentially at unconventional times, while tending to
family and other responsibilities, such as teaching children whose
schools are closed for COVID-19 related reasons. But section 790.6 and
the Department's continuous workday guidance generally provide that all
time between performance of the first and last principal activities is
compensable work time. See 29 CFR 790.6(a). Applying this guidance to
employers with employees who are teleworking for COVID-19 related
reasons would disincentivize and undermine the very flexibility in
teleworking arrangements that are
[[Page 19329]]
critical to the FFCRA framework Congress created within the broader
national response to COVID-19. As a result, the Department has
determined that an employer allowing such flexibility during the COVID-
19 pandemic shall not be required to count as hours worked all time
between the first and last principal activity performed by an employee
teleworking for COVID-19 related reasons as hours worked. For example,
an employee may agree with an employer to perform telework for COVID-19
related reasons on the following schedule: 7-9 a.m., 12:30-3 p.m., and
7-9 p.m. on weekdays. This allows an employee, for example, to help
teach children whose school is closed or assist the employee's parents
who are temporarily living with the family, reserving work times when
there are fewer distractions. Of course, the employer must compensate
the employee for all hours actually worked--7.5 hours--that day, but
not all 14 hours between the employee's first principal activity at 7
a.m. and last at 9 p.m. Section 790.6 and the Department's guidance
regarding the continuous workday continue to apply to all employees who
are not teleworking for COVID-19 related reasons.
B. Paid Leave Entitlements
Section 826.20 of Title 29 of the Code of Federal Regulations
describes the circumstances under which a covered employer must provide
paid sick leave and/or expanded family and medical leave to an eligible
employee.
Section 826.20(a) explains that an employee may take paid sick
leave if the employee is unable to work because of any one of six
qualifying reasons related to COVID-19. The first reason for paid sick
leave applies where an employee is unable to work because he or she is
subject to a Federal, State, or local COVID-19 quarantine or isolation
order. Quarantine or isolation orders include a broad range of
governmental orders, including orders that advise some or all citizens
to shelter in place, stay at home, quarantine, or otherwise restrict
their own mobility. Section 826.20(a)(2) explains that an employee may
take paid sick leave only if being subject to one of these orders
prevents him or her from working or teleworking as described therein.
The question is whether the employee would be able to work or telework
``but for'' being required to comply with a quarantine or isolation
order.
An employee subject to one of these orders may not take paid sick
leave where the employer does not have work for the employee. This is
because the employee would be unable to work even if he or she were not
required to comply with the quarantine or isolation order. For example,
if a coffee shop closes temporarily or indefinitely due to a downturn
in business related to COVID-19, it would no longer have any work for
its employees. A cashier previously employed at the coffee shop who is
subject to a stay-at-home order would not be able to work even if he
were not required to stay at home. As such, he may not take paid sick
leave because his inability to work is not due to his need to comply
with the stay-at-home order, but rather due to the closure of his place
of employment.\1\ That said, he may be eligible for state unemployment
insurance and should contact his State workforce agency or State
unemployment insurance office for specific questions about his
eligibility.
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\1\ This analysis holds even if the closure of the coffee shop
was substantially caused by a stay-at-home order. If the coffee shop
closed due to its customers being required to stay at home, the
reason for the cashier being unable to work would be because those
customers were subject to the stay-at-home order, not because the
cashier himself was subject to the order. Similarly, if the order
forced the coffee shop to close, the reason for the cashier being
unable to work would be because the coffee shop was subject to the
order, not because the cashier himself was subject to the order.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Additionally, Sec. 826.20(a)(2) explains that an employee subject
to a quarantine or isolation order is able to telework, and therefore
may not take paid sick leave, if (a) his or her employer has work for
the employee to perform; (b) the employer permits the employee to
perform that work from the location where the employee is being
quarantined or isolated; and (c) there are no extenuating circumstances
that prevent the employee from performing that work. For example, if a
law firm permits its lawyers to work from home, a lawyer would not be
prevented from working by a stay-at-home order, and thus may not take
paid sick leave as a result of being subject to that order. In this
circumstance, the lawyer is able to telework even if she is required to
use her own computer instead of her employer's computer. But, she would
not be able to telework in the event of a power outage or similar
extenuating circumstance and would therefore be eligible for paid sick
leave during the period of the power outage or extenuating circumstance
due to the quarantine or isolation order.
The second reason for paid sick leave applies where an employee is
unable to work because he or she has been advised by a health care
provider, as defined in 29 CFR 825.102, to self-quarantine for a COVID-
19 reason. Section 826.20(a)(3) explains that the advice to self-
quarantine must be based on the health care provider's belief that the
employee has COVID-19, may have COVID-19, or is particularly vulnerable
to COVID-19. And, self-quarantining must prevent the employee from
working. An employee who is self-quarantining is able to telework, and
therefore may not take paid sick leave for this reason, if (a) his or
her employer has work for the employee to perform; (b) the employer
permits the employee to perform that work from the location where the
employee is self-quarantining; and (c) there are no extenuating
circumstances, such as serious COVID-19 symptoms, that prevent the
employee from performing that work. For instance, if the lawyer in the
above example would be able to work while self-quarantining at home,
she may not take paid sick leave due to a need to self-quarantine.
The third reason for paid sick leave applies where an employee is
experiencing symptoms of COVID-19 and seeking a medical diagnosis.
Section 826.20(a)(4) explains that symptoms that could trigger this
are: Fever, dry cough, shortness of breath, or other COVID-19 symptoms
identified by the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention
(CDC). Additionally, paid sick leave taken for this reason must be
limited to the time the employee is unable to work because he or she is
taking affirmative steps to obtain a medical diagnosis. Thus, an
employee experiencing COVID-19 symptoms may take paid sick leave, for
instance, for time spent making, waiting for, or attending an
appointment for a test for COVID-19. But, the employee may not take
paid sick leave to self-quarantine without seeking a medical diagnosis.
An employee who is waiting for the results of a test is able to
telework, and therefore may not take paid sick leave, if: (a) His or
her employer has work for the employee to perform; (b) the employer
permits the employee to perform that work from the location where the
employee is waiting; and (c) there are no extenuating circumstances,
such as serious COVID-19 symptoms, that may prevent the employee from
performing that work. An employee may continue to take leave while
experiencing any of the symptoms specified at Sec. 826.20(a)(4),
however; or may continue to take leave after testing positive for
COVID-19, regardless of symptoms experienced, provided that the health
care provider advises the employee to self-quarantine. In addition, an
employee who is unable to telework may continue to take paid sick leave
under this reason while awaiting
[[Page 19330]]
a test result, regardless of the severity of the COVID-19 symptoms that
he or she might be experiencing. In the case of an employee who
exhibits COVID-19 symptoms and seeks medical advice but is told that he
or she does not meet the criteria for testing and is advised to self-
quarantine, he or she is eligible for leave under the second reason,
provided he or she meets all the requirements spelled out above.
The fourth reason for paid sick leave applies where an employee is
unable to work because he or she needs to care for an individual who is
either: (a) Subject to a Federal, State, or local quarantine or
isolation order; or (b) has been advised by a health care provider to
self-quarantine due to concerns related to COVID-19. This qualifying
reason applies only if but for a need to care for an individual, the
employee would be able to perform work for his or her employer.
Accordingly, an employee caring for an individual may not take paid
sick leave if the employer does not have work for him or her.
Furthermore, if the employee must have a genuine need to care for the
individual. Accordingly, Sec. 826.20(a)(5) explains that paid sick
leave may not be taken to care for someone with whom the employee has
no personal relationship. Rather, the individual being cared for must
be an immediate family member, roommate, or a similar person with whom
the employee has a relationship that creates an expectation that the
employee would care for the person if he or she self-quarantined or was
quarantined. Additionally, the individual being cared for must: (a) Be
subject to a Federal, State, or local quarantine or isolation order as
described above; or (b) have been advised by a health care provider to
self-quarantine based on a belief that he or she has COVID-19, may have
COVID-19, or is particularly vulnerable to COVID-19.
The fifth reason for paid sick leave applies when the employee is
unable to work because the employee needs to care for his or her son or
daughter if: (a) The child's school or place of care has closed; or (b)
the child care provider is unavailable, due to COVID-19 related
reasons. Again, the employee must be able to perform work for his or
her employer but for the need to care for his or her son or daughter,
which means an employee may not take paid sick leave if the employer
does not have work for him or her. Moreover, an employee may take paid
sick leave to care for his or her child only when the employee needs
to, and actually is, caring for his or her child. Generally, an
employee does not need to take such leave if another suitable
individual--such as a co-parent, co-guardian, or the usual child care
provider--is available to provide the care the employee's child needs.
The sixth reason for paid sick leave applies if the employee is
unable to work because the employee is experiencing any other
substantially similar condition specified by the Secretary of Health
and Human Services in consultation with the Secretary of the Treasury
and the Secretary of Labor.
Section 826.20(b) explains that an employee may take expanded
family and medical leave if the employee is unable to work due to a
need for leave to care for his or her son or daughter if the child's
school or place of care is closed, or the child care provider of such
son or daughter is unavailable, for reasons related to COVID-19. The
EFMLEA provides that this reason for leave is for closures or
unavailability ``due to a public health emergency,'' which the statute
defines as ``an emergency with respect to COVID-19 declared by a
Federal, State, or local authority.'' FFCRA section 3102(b) (adding
FMLA section 110(a)(2)(A), (B)). In keeping with the Department's
statutory authority to issue regulations to ensure consistency between
the EPSLA and the EFMLEA, the regulatory text uses ``for reasons
related to COVID-19'' to match the regulatory text related to the same
reason for taking paid sick leave. In other words, the leave authorized
by the EFMLEA is the same as the fifth reason discussed above
authorized by the EPSLA, i.e., leave required when an employee is
unable to work because of a need to care for his or her son or daughter
if the school or place of care of the son or daughter is closed, or the
child care provider of the son or daughter is unavailable, due to
COVID-19 related reasons.
The Department recognizes that section 3102 of the EFMLEA defines
``qualifying need related to a public health emergency'' as a need for
leave ``to care for the son or daughter under 18 years of age of such
employee if the school or place of care has been closed, or the child
care provider of such son or daughter is unavailable, due to a public
health emergency.'' FFCRA section 3102(b) (adding FMLA section
110(a)(2)(A), (B)). This definition can be read to narrow the FMLA
definition of son or daughter, which includes children under 18 years
of age or 18 years of age or older and incapable of self-care because
of a mental or physical disability. 29 U.S.C. 2611(12). Section 5110(4)
of the EPSLA states that the FMLA definition of son or daughter applies
when, among other things, the employee is unable to work because the
employee is caring for a son or daughter of the employee if: (a) The
school or place of care of the son or daughter has been closed; or (b)
the child care provider of such son or daughter is unavailable, due to
COVID-19 related reasons.
The Department considered interpreting the leave provision of the
EFMLEA to apply only when an employee is unable to work because of a
need to care for a child under age 18 years of age, and not to apply
when a child is 18 years of age or older and incapable of self-care
because of a mental or physical disability. The Department also
recognizes there could be other interpretations of the ``under 18 years
of age'' phrase within the EFMLEA. However, the Department has decided
not to employ these alternative interpretations because it sees
significant disadvantages to having different rules under the EFMLEA
and the EPSLA for when an employee may take leave to care for his or
her son or daughter. Having different rules would introduce unnecessary
complexity and incongruity into the leave provisions and could
improperly deny leave to employees with a need to care for a child age
18 or older who is incapable of caring for himself or herself because
of a mental or physical disability. The Department is therefore
treating the definitions as the same pursuant to its authority under
section 5111 of the EPSLA and section 110(a) of the FMLA, as amended by
the EFMLEA, and the CARES Act, and will issue regulations to ensure
consistency between the EPSLA and the EFMLEA.
The Department intends that providing maximum flexibility to
employers and employees during the public health emergency should not
impact the underlying relationships between an employer and an
employee. More specifically, nothing in this Act should be construed as
impacting an employee's exempt status under the FLSA. For example, an
employee's use of intermittent leave combined with either paid sick
leave or expanded family and medical leave should not be construed as
undermining the employee's salary basis for purposes of 29 U.S.C. 213
and 29 CFR part 541.
Section 826.21 explains how much paid sick leave an employee is
entitled to under the EPSLA. Under section 5102(b)(2) of the EPSLA, a
full-time employee is entitled to 80 hours of paid sick leave, and a
part-time employee is entitled to the ``number of hours that such
employee works, on average, over a 2-week period.'' Section
5110(5)(C)(i) further provides that if the part-time employee's
``schedule varies from week to week . . . the average number of
[[Page 19331]]
hours that the employee was scheduled per day over the 6-month period
ending on the date on which the employee takes the paid sick time''
shall be used in place of the ``number of hours that such employee
works, on average, over a 2-week period'' under section 5102(b)(2)(B)
to determine the number of paid sick leave hours.
The Department does not believe the EPSLA intended to replace the
average number of hours worked ``over a 2-week period'' with the
average number of hours scheduled ``per day'' as the number of paid
sick leave hours because such replacement would create a contradiction
within the statute and lead to an absurd outcome. Setting hours of paid
sick leave ``equal to the average number of hours that the employee was
scheduled per day,'' as section 5110(5)(C)(i) requires, would violate
the requirement under section 5102(b)(2)(B) that ``hours of paid sick
time to which an employee is entitled shall be . . . equal to the
number of hours that such employee works, on average, over a 2-week
period'' for the obvious reason that a day is different from a two-week
period. And the number of hours an employee typically works in a day is
an order of magnitude lower than the number of hours that an employee
typically works in a two-week period. Thus, an employee who works a
varied schedule would be entitled to an order of magnitude fewer hours
of paid sick leave than if the employee had worked a regular schedule.
In light of the FFCRA, the Department can think of no reason why
Congress would penalize part-time employees who work varied as opposed
to regular schedules.
Rather, the Department believes Congress intended to use the daily
average to compute the two-week average. Because there are fourteen
calendar days over a two-week period, the Department believes Congress
intended for the EPSLA to provide part-time employees whose weekly
schedule varies with paid sick leave equal to fourteen times the
``number of hours that the employee was scheduled per [calendar] day,''
averaged over the above-mentioned six-month period. An employer may
also use twice the number of hours that an employee was scheduled to
work per workweek, averaged over the six-month period.
The EPSLA does not define what it means to be a ``full-time'' or
``part-time'' employee. Because paid sick leave is designed to provide
leave ``over a 2-week period,'' and the EPSLA provides up to 80 hours
of such leave to full-time employees, the Department believes a full-
time employee is an employee who works at least 80 hours over two
workweeks, or at least 40 hours each workweek. As a result, the
Department defines a full-time employee as an employee who is normally
scheduled to work at least 40 hours each workweek in Sec.
826.21(a)(2). Further, Sec. 826.21(a)(3) provides that an employee who
does not have a normal weekly schedule may also be a full-time employee
if he or she is scheduled to work, on average, at least 40 hours each
workweek. For consistency purposes, this weekly average should be
computed over the same six-month period as the ``Varying Schedule Hours
Calculation'' for certain part-time employees under section
5110(5)(C)(i) of the FFCRA. Thus, Sec. 826.21(a)(3) provides that the
average hours per workweek for an employee who does not have a normal
weekly schedule should be calculated over the six-months prior to the
date on which leave is requested to determine if he or she is a full-
time employee. If the employee has been employed for less than six
months, the average hours per workweek is computed over the entire
period of employment.
Under Sec. 826.21(b), a part-time employee is an employee who is
normally scheduled to work fewer than 40 hours each workweek or--if the
employee lacks a normal weekly schedule--who is scheduled to work, on
average, fewer than 40 hours each workweek. Under Sec. 826.21(b)(1), a
part-time employee who works a normal schedule is entitled to paid sick
leave equal to the number of hours he or she is normally scheduled to
work over a two-workweek period. As discussed above, the Department
believes that a part-time employee whose weekly work schedule varies
should be entitled to paid sick leave equal to fourteen times the
average number of hours that the employee was scheduled to work per
calendar day over the six-month period ending on the date on which the
employee takes paid sick leave, including hours for which the employee
took leave of any type. This computation is possible only if the
employee has been employed for at least six months. Thus, Sec.
826.21(b)(2) provides variable-schedule part-time employees with such
an amount of paid sick leave.
Section 5110(5)(C)(ii) of the EPSLA further provides that, if a
part-time employee with a varying weekly schedule has been employed for
fewer than six months, ``the reasonable expectation of the employee at
the time of hiring of the average number of hours per day that the
employee would normally be scheduled to work'' should be used ``in
place of'' the average number of hours worked ``over a 2-week period''
under section 5102(b)(2)(B) to determine the amount of paid sick leave
to which an employee is entitled. Again, the Department does not
believe that in the EPSLA Congress intended for ``the reasonable
expectation . . . of the average number of hours per day'' to be used
``in place of'' the average number of hours worked ``over a 2-week
period.'' Rather, Congress intended to use the expected daily average
number of hours to estimate the two-week average. The Department
further believes such ``reasonable expectation'' is best evidenced by
an agreement between the employer and employee at the time of hiring.
Thus, Sec. 826.21(b)(3) states that a part-time employee with a
varying schedule who has been employed for fewer than six months is
entitled to fourteen times the expected number of hours the employee
and employer agreed at the time of hiring that the employee would work,
on average, each calendar day. This is equal to twice the average
number of hours that the employee would be expected to work each
workweek. The agreement could have used any time period--e.g., each
workweek, month, or year--to express the average number of hours the
employee was expected to work, so long as that daily average could be
extrapolated. In the absence of such an agreement, the Department
believes that the actual average number of hours the employee was
scheduled to work each workday demonstrates ``the reasonable
expectation . . . of the average number of hours per day that the
employee would normally be scheduled to work.'' FFCRA section
5110(5)(C)(ii). Accordingly, Sec. 826.21(b)(3) further states that, in
the absence of an agreement regarding the expected number of hours
worked each day, a part-time employee with a varying schedule who has
been employed for fewer than six months ``is entitled to up to the
number of hours of paid sick leave equal to fourteen times the average
number of hours per calendar day that the employee was scheduled to
work over the entire period of employment, including hours for which
the employee took leave of any type.'' An employer may also use twice
the number of hours that an employee was scheduled to work per
workweek, on average, over the six-month period.
Section 826.22 explains the amount of pay due to employees who take
paid sick leave. If the employee takes paid sick leave because he or
she is subject to a Federal, State, or local COVID-19 quarantine or
isolation order; has been advised by a health care provider to self-
quarantine for COVID-related reasons;
[[Page 19332]]
or is experiencing COVID-19 symptoms and seeking a medical diagnosis,
the employer must pay the employee his or her regular rate of pay
(subject to the qualifications described below) for each hour of paid
sick leave taken. If an employee takes paid sick leave because of any
other COVID-19 qualifying reason, the employer must pay the employee
two-thirds of the employee's regular rate of pay (subject to the
qualifications described below).
If the employee's regular rate of pay is lower than the Federal,
State, or local minimum wage (if applicable to the employee), the
employee should instead be paid the highest of such amounts. That means
an employee taking paid sick leave because he or she is subject to a
Federal, State, or local COVID-19 quarantine or isolation order; has
been advised by a health care provider to self-quarantine for COVID-
related reasons; or is experiencing COVID-19 symptoms and seeking a
medical diagnosis must be paid the highest applicable minimum wage
(federal, state, or local). And, an employee taking paid sick leave for
any other COVID-19 qualifying reason must be paid at least two-thirds
of the highest applicable minimum wage.
The amount an employer is required to pay is capped at $511 per day
of paid sick leave taken and $5,110 in total per covered employee for
all paid sick leave pay. Furthermore, where an employee is taking paid
sick leave at two-thirds pay, the amount of pay is subject to a lower
cap of $200 per day of leave and $2,000 in total per covered employee
for all paid sick leave that is paid at two-thirds pay.
Section 826.23 explains that expanded family and medical leave is a
type of FMLA leave that is available for certain eligible employees
between April 1, 2020, and December 31, 2020. As such, Sec. 826.23(a)
explains that an eligible employee is entitled to up to twelve
workweeks of expanded family and medical leave, as provided under
section 102 of the FMLA, during that period. See 29 U.S.C. 2612; see
also 29 CFR 825.200. Section 826.23(b) further clarifies that any time
taken by an eligible employee as expanded family and medical leave
counts towards the twelve workweeks of FMLA leave to which the employee
is entitled under section 102 of the FMLA and 29 CFR 825.200. Because
the FFCRA amends the FMLA, and in particular references Section
102(d)(2)(B) of the FMLA, Sec. 826.23 explains that an employee may
elect to use, or an employer may require an employee to use, accrued
leave that under the employer's policies would be available to the
employee to care for a child, such as vacation or personal leave or
paid time off concurrently with the expanded family and medical leave
under the EFMLEA. Although Section 102(d)(2)(B) is read broader in the
traditional FMLA context to include sick and medical leave, the
Department notes that the FMLA is in part a medical leave, whereas the
leave provided under the FFCRA is solely for care for a family (i.e., a
child whose school or place of care is closed or whose child care
provider is unavailable). The Department believes that this flexibility
carries out the purposes of the FFCRA by allowing employees to receive
full pay during the period for which they have preexisting accrued
vacation or personal leave or paid time off, and allowing employers to
require employees to take such leave and minimize employee absences.
Section 826.24 explains the amount an employer must pay an employee
for each day of expanded family and medical leave under the EFMLEA
taken to care for his or her child whose school or place of care is
closed, or whose child care provider is unavailable, for a COVID-19
related reason. The payment requirement under the EFMLEA is triggered
after two weeks that an employee uses leave for this reason. For each
day of expanded family and medical leave after the initial two-week
period, the employer must pay an employee taking such leave two-thirds
of the employee's regular rate times the number of hours the employee
would normally be scheduled to work that day, up to a maximum of $200
per day or $10,000 in total for the additional ten workweeks.
Some employees do not have a regular work schedule. If the
employee's ``schedule varies week to week to such an extent that an
employer is unable to determine with certainty [that] number of
hours,'' section 110(b)(2)(C)(i) of the FMLA, as amended by the EFMLEA,
requires the employer to compute pay per day of expanded family and
medical leave based on ``the average number of hours the employee was
scheduled per day over the six-month period ending on the date on which
the employee takes such leave, including hours for which the employee
took leave of any type.'' This six-month average of daily hours is
possible only if the employee has been employed for at least six
months. The Department does not believe Congress intended for the
EFMLEA to use this six-month average only where an employee's
``schedule varies week to week,'' but also where the schedule varies
day to day. This is because, even if an employee is scheduled for the
same number of hours each workweek, day-to-day variations within each
workweek could prevent an employer from determining the number of hours
an employee would have been scheduled to work on a particular
workday.\2\ Thus, Sec. 826.24(b) provides that the six-month average
set forth in section 110(b)(2)(C) of the FMLA, as amended by the
EFMLEA, is to be used to compute pay for each day of expanded family
and medical leave taken where an employee's work schedule varies,
without a week-to-week requirement, and has been employed for at least
six months.
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\2\ For instance, an employee may always work 40 hours each
workweek, but on some weeks the employee works five eight-hour
shifts and on other weeks he or she works four ten-hour shifts.
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For an employee with a varying schedule of hours who has been
employed for fewer than six months, section 110(b)(2)(C)(i) of the
FMLA, as amended by the EFMLEA, provides that ``the reasonable
expectation of the employee at the time of hiring of the average number
of hours per day that the employee would normally be scheduled to
work'' should be used to compute the amount of pay for each day of
expanded family and medical leave he or she takes after the initial
unpaid period. The Department believes such ``reasonable expectation''
is best evidenced by an agreement between the employer and employee at
the time of hiring. Thus, Sec. 826.21(b)(2)(ii) explains the number of
hours per day used to compute pay for an employee with a varying
schedule who has been employed for less than six months is equal to the
number of hours that the employee and the employer agreed at the time
of hiring that the employee would be expected to work, on average, each
workday. The agreement could have expressed the average number of hours
over any time period--e.g., each week, month, or year--so long as that
daily average could be extrapolated. In the absence of such an
agreement, the Department believes that the actual average number of
hours the employee was scheduled to work each workday evinces ``the
reasonable expectation . . . of the average number of hours per day
that the employee would normally be scheduled to work.'' Accordingly,
Sec. 826.21(b)(2)(ii) further states that, in the absence of an
agreement regarding the expected number of hours worked each day, the
employer should use ``the average number of hours per workday that the
employee was scheduled to work over the entire period of employment,
including hours for which the employee took leave of any type'' to
compute the amount of pay for an employee with a varying schedule who
[[Page 19333]]
has been employed for fewer than six months.
The Department recognizes that the two-week initial unpaid period
of expanded family and medical leave under Sec. 826.60 is different
from the ten-day unpaid period set forth in section 110(b)(1)(A) of the
FMLA, as amended by the EFMLEA. This deviation is necessary to ensure
that expanded family and medical leave provided under the EFMLEA and
paid sick leave provided under the EPSLA work together--as Congress
intended--to permit an employee to have a continuous income stream
while taking FFCRA paid leave to care for his or her child whose school
or place of care is closed, or whose child care provider is
unavailable, for a COVID-19 related reason.
The EFMLEA provides that, during the unpaid period of expanded
family and medical leave, an employee may receive pay by using other
paid leave to which he or she may be entitled, including paid sick
leave provided by the EPSLA. Paid sick leave may be used for the same
reason as expanded family and medical leave, i.e., to care for a child
whose school or place of care is closed, or whose child care provider
is unavailable, for a COVID-19 related reason. And the amount of pay
per hour of paid sick leave is guaranteed to be at least as much as the
amount of pay per hour for paid expanded family and medical leave,
i.e., two-thirds of the employee's regular rate, up to $200 per day.
Furthermore, the entitlement to paid sick leave of an employee with a
regular work schedule, i.e., eight hours each day for five days for a
total of 40 hours each workweek--is the same as the ten-day period of
unpaid expanded family and medical leave. Such an employee is entitled
to 80 hours of paid sick leave, which provides pay at two-thirds of the
employee's regular rate, as defined in Sec. 826.25, for ten workdays.
If the employee were concurrently taking expanded family and medical
leave, he or she would be able to take paid expanded family and medical
leave at two-thirds the regular rate as soon as the 80 hours of paid
sick leave runs out. Thus, paid sick leave and expanded family and
medical leave are designed to work in tandem to provide continuous
income for an employee to care for his or her child whose school or
place of care is closed, or whose child care provider is unavailable,
for a COVID-19 related reason. Put another way, the reason for an
unpaid initial period of expanded family and medical leave is because
an eligible employee already may concurrently use paid sick leave for
the same reason and get paid at the same rate. The unpaid period is
therefore intended to ensure that the employee has sufficient leave for
a constant stream of income at two-thirds the regular rate, up to $200
per day, while taking care of his or her child, but not more paid leave
than necessary for that purpose.
As explained above, a ten-day period of unpaid expanded family and
medical leave satisfies these purposes for an employee who works a
regular 40-hour week. But the twin purposes of providing sufficient,
yet not excessive, paid leave are not satisfied with respect to
employees who work unconventional hours. For instance, consider an
employee who works twelve hours each day for three days each workweek,
or a total of 36 hours each workweek. This employee would be entitled
to 72 hours of paid sick leave under the EPSLA to care for his or her
child, which lasts for two workweeks. The employee, however, would not
be able to take paid expanded family and medical leave at the end of
two workweeks time because he would have taken only six workdays of
such leave, and the ten-day period of unpaid leave would still be in
effect. In order to have a continuous income stream until the ten-day
unpaid period of expanded family and medical leave expired, the
employee would need an additional 48 hours of paid sick leave.
As another example, consider a second employee who works six hours
each day for six days each workweek, also for a total of 36 hours each
workweek. The second employee would likewise be entitled to 72 hours of
paid sick leave under the EPSLA to care for his or her child, which
lasts for two workweeks or twelve workdays. The period of unpaid
expanded family and medical leave would expire after ten workdays--two
workdays before the second employee runs out of paid sick leave. The
second employee may transition from paid sick leave to expanded family
and medical leave after ten workdays, leaving two days of paid sick
leave unused. In other words, the second employee would have two more
days of paid leave than necessary to have a continuous income stream at
two-thirds the regular rate while caring for his or her child.
In short, there is inconsistency between the provisions for
expanded family and medical leave under the EFMLEA and paid sick leave
under the EPSLA with respect to the first employee because he or she
would be 48 hours short of being able to have continuous income. And
there is inconsistency between the two Acts with respect to the second
employee because he or she would have more hours of leave than needed
for that purpose. Accordingly, pursuant to the Secretary's authority to
issue regulations ``to ensure consistency'' between the two types of
paid leave under the FFCRA, Sec. 826.24 states that the unpaid period
for expanded family and medical leave lasts for two weeks rather than
ten days.\3\
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\3\ As a practical matter, the unpaid period for employees who
work regular Monday-through-Friday schedules would still be ten days
because that is the number of days they would work in two weeks.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
In subsection (d), we made clear that despite the cap on pay, an
employee may elect to use, or an employer may require that an employee
take leave under the employer's policies that would be available to the
employee to care for a child, such as vacation or personal leave or
paid time off, concurrently with expanded family and medical leave, and
the employer must pay the employee a full day's pay for that day.
Section 826.25 explains how to calculate the regular rate that is
used to determine the amount an employer must pay an eligible employee
who takes paid sick leave or expanded family and medical leave (after
the initial two-week unpaid period). An employee's regular rate is
computed for each workweek as defined under section 7(e) of the FLSA,
as ``all [non-overtime] remuneration for employment'' paid to the
employee except for eight statutory exclusions, divided by the number
of hours worked in that workweek. See 29 U.S.C. 207(e); see also Bay
Ridge Operating Co. v. Aaron, 334 U.S. 446, 458 (1948) (stating that
the ``regular rate must be computed by dividing the total number of
hours worked into the total [non-overtime] compensation received'').
The Department's regulations at 29 CFR parts 531 and 778 explain
how to calculate the regular rate in different circumstances. For
example, the Department uses the computation of an employee's regular
rate with respect to tips in Sec. 531.60. Moreover, the Department
clarifies how to compute an employee's regular rate under different
compensation arrangements, including commissions and piece rates, at
Sec. Sec. 778.110-.122, and explains what types of compensation are
excludable from the regular rate, at Sec. Sec. 778.200-.225. The
regular rate used to determine the amount of pay due an employee who
takes paid sick leave or expanded family and medical leave must be
computed using the same methods as those described in 29 CFR parts 531
and 778.
[[Page 19334]]
The regular rate must also be computed on a workweek to workweek
basis. See, e.g., Sec. 778.104 (``Each workweek stands alone'').
Neither the EPSLA nor the EFMLEA, however, explains which workweek
should be used to compute the regular rate that is the basis for
determining the amount of pay for leave taken. The Department does not
believe it would be appropriate to use the workweek in which an
employee takes leave because an employee's hours worked, and therefore
regular rate, in such a workweek is unlikely to be representative.
Indeed, if the employee takes leave for the entire workweek, the
regular rate would equal zero.
Instead, the Department believes the regular rate used to determine
the amount of pay under the EPSLA and the EFMLEA should be
representative of the employee's regular rate from week to week.
Section 826.25 therefore requires an employer to use an average of the
employee's regular rate over multiple workweeks.\4\ Such an average
should be weighted by the number of hours worked each workweek. For
example, consider an employee who receives $400 of non-excludable
compensation in one week for working 40 hours and $200 of non-
excludable compensation in the next week for working ten hours. The
regular rate in the first week is $10 per hour ($400 / 40 hours), and
the regular rate for the second week is $20 per hour ($200 / 10 hours).
The weighted average, however, is not computed by averaging $10 per
hour and $20 per hour (which would be $15 per hour). Rather, it is
computed by adding up all compensation over the relevant period (here,
two workweeks), which is $600, and then dividing that sum by all hours
worked over the same period, which is 50 hours. Thus, the weighted
average regular rate over this two-week period is $12 per hour ($600 /
50 hours).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\4\ The Department notes that Sec. 778.104 states that the FLSA
``does not permit averaging of hours over 2 or more weeks'' for the
purpose of computing the regular rate. But this prohibition against
averaging applies when the regular rate is used for its purpose
under the FLSA to compute overtime pay due. It does not apply when,
as here, the regular rate is used as a metric for an employee's
average hourly non-overtime wages.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
To be representative, the period over which the regular rate is
averaged should be substantially greater than the two workweeks used in
the above example. The Department believes it would be appropriate to
compute the average regular rate over the same period used by the EPSLA
and the EFMLEA to compute the employee's average number of hours worked
per day, i.e., a six-month period ending on the date on which the
employee first takes paid sick leave or expanded family and medical
leave. The Department has selected this six-month period because it is
sufficiently representative under both the EPSLA and the EFMLEA. And it
minimizes regulatory burden by allowing employers to use the same
payroll and schedule records to compute both an employee's average
number of hours worked per day and average regular rate. Of course,
computing an average regular rate used to determine the amount of pay
should be computed over a six-month period is not possible if the
employee at issue has not been employed for at least six months. In
such a case, the average regular rate should be computed over the
entire term of the employment.
C. Employee Eligibility for Leave Under the EPSLA and the EFMLEA
Section 826.30 sets out the criteria for an employee's eligibility
to receive paid sick leave under the EPSLA and/or expanded family and
medical leave under the EFMLEA, which have similar, but not identical,
eligibility requirements for leave. This section also addresses when
employers may elect to exclude certain otherwise-eligible employees
from coverage under these Acts.
Sections 826.30(a) and (b) provide that all employees employed by a
covered employer are eligible to take paid sick leave under the EPSLA
regardless of their duration of employment, and all employees who have
been employed by a covered employer for at least thirty calendar days
are eligible to take expanded family and medical leave under the
EFMLEA, subject to the exceptions described in Sec. Sec. 826.30(c)-(d)
and .40(b).
Section 826.30(b)(1)(i) further explains that an employee is
considered to have been employed for at least thirty calendar days for
purposes of EFMLEA eligibility if the employer had the employee on its
payroll for the thirty calendar days immediately prior to the day that
the employee's leave would begin. For example, for an employee to be
eligible to take leave under the EFMLEA on April 1, 2020, the employee
must have been on the employer's payroll as of March 2, 2020. Section
826.30(b)(1)(ii) provides that an employee who is laid off or otherwise
terminated by an employer on or after March 1, 2020, is nevertheless
also considered to have been employed for at least thirty calendar
days, provided the employer rehires or otherwise reemploys the employee
on or before December 31, 2020, and the employee had been on the
employer's payroll for thirty or more of the sixty calendar days prior
to the date the employee was laid off or otherwise terminated. ``For
example, an employee who was originally hired by an employer on January
15, 2020, but laid off on March 14, 2020, would be eligible for leave
under the EFMLEA and the EPSLA, if the same employer rehired the
employee on October 1, 2020.''
The EFMLEA and the EPSLA both provide that an employer may exclude
employees who are health care providers or emergency responders from
leave requirements under the Acts. Section 826.30(c) reiterates this
option and defines which employees are ``health care providers'' or
``emergency responders'' whom employers may exclude from eligibility
for the EPSLA and the EFMLEA's leave requirements. An employer's
exercise of this option does not impact an employee's earned or accrued
sick, personal, vacation, or other employer-provided leave under the
employer's established policies. Further, an employer's exercise of
this option does not authorize an employer to prevent an employee who
is a health care provider or emergency responder from taking earned or
accrued leave in accordance with established employer policies. Because
an employer is not required to exercise this option, if an employer
does not elect to exclude an otherwise-eligible health care provider or
emergency responder from taking paid leave under the EPSLA or the
EFMLEA, such leave is subject to all other requirements of those laws
and this Part, and should be treated in the same manner for purposes of
the tax credit created by the FFCRA. To minimize the spread of COVID-
19, the Department encourages employers to be judicious when using this
definition to exempt health care providers and emergency responders
from the provisions of the FFCRA.
The Department recognizes that health care providers whom an
employer may exempt pursuant to sections 3105 and 5102(a) of the FFCRA
is broader than the definition of health care provider under 29 CFR
825.102. Section 5110(4) of the FFCRA adopts the FMLA definition of
``health care providers,'' which includes licensed doctors of medicine
or osteopathy and ``any other person determined by the Secretary to be
capable of providing health care services.'' 29 U.S.C. 2611(6). The
Department defined ``health care provider'' narrowly in Sec. 825.102
to mean medical professionals who are capable of diagnosing serious
health conditions in light of the FMLA's requirement for such health
care
[[Page 19335]]
providers to issue certifications regarding the nature and probable
duration of serious health conditions. See 29 U.S.C. 2613; see also 58
FR 31800 (``Because health care providers will need to indicate their
diagnosis in health care certificates, such a broad definition was
considered inappropriate.'').
The term ``health care provider'' as used in sections 3105 and
5102(a) of the FFCRA, however, is not limited to diagnosing medical
professionals. Rather, such health care providers include any
individual who is capable of providing health care services necessary
to combat the COVID-19 public health emergency. Such individuals
include not only medical professionals, but also other workers who are
needed to keep hospitals and similar health care facilities well
supplied and operational. They further include, for example, workers
who are involved in research, development, and production of equipment,
drugs, vaccines, and other items needed to combat the COVID-19 public
health emergency. Accordingly, the Department is adopting a definition
of ``health care provider'' that is broader than the diagnosing medical
professionals under Sec. 825.102 for the limited purpose of
identifying employees whom an employer may exclude under sections 3105
and 5102(a) of the FFCRA. The definition of health care provider under
Sec. 825.102 continues to apply for other purposes of the FFCRA, such
as, for instance, identifying health care providers who may advise an
employee to self-quarantine for COVID-19 related reasons under section
5102(a)(2).
The authority for employers to exempt emergency responders is
reflective of a balance struck by the FFCRA. On the one hand, the FFCRA
provides for paid sick leave and expanded family and medical leave so
employees will not be forced to choose between their paychecks and the
individual and public health measures necessary to combat COVID-19. On
the other hand, providing paid sick leave or expanded family and
medical leave does not come at the expense of fully staffing the
necessary functions of society, including the functions of emergency
responders. The FFRCA should be read to complement--and not detract
from--the work being done on the front lines to treat COVID-19
patients, prevent the spread of COVID-19, and simultaneously keep
Americans safe and with access to essential services. Therefore, the
Department interprets ``emergency responder'' broadly.
The specific parameters of the Department's definition of
``emergency responder'' derive from consultation of various statutory
and regulatory definitions and from the consideration of input provided
to the Department by various stakeholders and public officials. The
Department endeavored to include those categories of employees who (1)
interact with and aid individuals with physical or mental health
issues, including those who are or may be suffering from COVID-19; (2)
ensure the welfare and safety of our communities and of our Nation; (3)
have specialized training relevant to emergency response; and (4)
provide essential services relevant to the American people's health and
wellbeing. While the Department endeavored to identify these categories
of workers, it was cognizant that no list could be fully inclusive or
account for the differing needs of specific communities. Therefore, the
definition allows for the highest official of a state or territory to
identify other categories of emergency responders, as necessary.
Section 826.30(d) explains that the CARES Act grants authority to
the Director of OMB to exclude, for good cause, certain federal
government employers from eligibility to take paid sick leave or
expanded family and medical leave. As to the EFMLEA, the Director of
OMB may exclude certain categories of United States Executive Branch
employees from expanded family and medical leave. As to the EPSLA, the
Director of OMB may exclude certain categories of federal government
employees if they are covered by Title II of the FMLA, occupy a
position in the civil service (as defined in 5 U.S.C. 2101(1)), and/or
are employees of a United States Executive Agency (as defined in 5
U.S.C. 105), which includes employees of the U.S. Postal Service and
the U.S. Postal and Regulatory Commission.
D. Employer Coverage Under the EPSLA and the EFMLEA
Section 826.40 addresses which employers are covered by the EPSLA
and the EFMLEA, that is, which employers must provide paid leave to
employees as described in those Acts.
Section 826.40(a) explains which private employers must provide
paid sick leave and expanded family and medical leave to their
employees. Specifically, it explains that, subject to the exemption
described in Sec. 826.40(b), all private employers that employ fewer
than 500 employees at the time an employee would take leave must comply
with the EPSLA and the EFMLEA.
This determination is dependent on the number of employees at the
time an employee would take leave. For example, if an employer has 450
employees on April 20, 2020, and an employee is unable to work starting
on that date because a health care provider has advised that employee
to self-quarantine because of concerns related to COVID-19, the
employer must provide paid sick leave to that employee. If, however,
the employer hires 75 new employees between April 21, 2020, and August
3, 2020, such that the employer employs 525 employees as of August 3,
2020, the employer would not be required to provide paid sick leave to
a different employee who is unable to work for the same reason
beginning on August 3, 2020.
Section 826.40(a) also addresses how to determine who counts as an
employee for this purpose, including discussing categories of workers
who do (and do not) count toward the 500-employee threshold. In making
this determination, the employer should include full-time and part-time
employees, employees on leave, temporary employees who are jointly
employed by the employer and another employer, and day laborers
supplied by a temporary placement agency. Independent contractors that
provide services for an employer do not count towards the 500-employee
threshold. Nor do employees count who have been laid off or furloughed
and have not subsequently been reemployed. Furthermore, employees must
be employed within the United States. For example, if an employer
employs 1,000 employees in North America, but only 250 are employed in
a U.S. State, the District of Columbia, or a territory or possession of
the United States, that employer will be considered to have 250
employees and is thus subject to the FFCRA.
Section 826.40(a) further explains that joint or integrated
employers must combine employees in determining the number of employees
they employ for this purpose. The FLSA's test for joint employer status
applies in determining who is a joint employer for purposes of
coverage, and the FMLA's test for integrated employer status applies in
determining who is an integrated employer, under both the EPSLA and the
EFMLEA.
Section 826.40(a) does not distinguish between for-profit and non-
profit entities; employers of both types must comply with the FFCRA if
they otherwise meet the requirements for coverage.
Section 826.40(b) describes the small employer exemption pursuant
to the
[[Page 19336]]
Secretary's regulatory authority to exempt small private employers with
fewer than 50 employees from having to provide an employee with paid
sick leave and expanded family and medical leave to care for his or her
child whose school or place of care is closed, or child care provider
is unavailable, when such leave would jeopardize the viability of the
business as a going concern. The American Institute of Certified Public
Accountants (AICPA) allows companies to use the ``ongoing concern
assumption'' to defer some of its prepaid expenses until future
accounting periods because the entity can continue in business for the
foreseeable future without the intention nor the necessity to
liquidate, cease trading, or seek protection from creditors pursuant to
laws or regulations. In other words, the business is considered to
remain a viable business for the foreseeable future. There is no
formula provided by the AICPA to determine the viability of a business
as a going concern, but rather the standard considers conditions or
events in the aggregate.
The Department believes it is necessary to set forth objective
criteria for when a small business with fewer than 50 employees can
deny an employee paid sick leave or expanded family and medical leave
to care for the employee's son or daughter whose school or place of
care is closed, or child care provider is unavailable, for COVID-19
related reasons. To that end, section 826.40(b)(1) explains that a
small employer is exempt from the requirement to provide such leave
when: (1) Such leave would cause the small employer's expenses and
financial obligations to exceed available business revenue and cause
the small employer to cease operating at a minimal capacity; (2) the
absence of the employee or employees requesting such leave would pose a
substantial risk to the financial health or operational capacity of the
small employer because of their specialized skills, knowledge of the
business, or responsibilities; or (3) the small employer cannot find
enough other workers who are able, willing, and qualified, and who will
be available at the time and place needed, to perform the labor or
services the employee or employees requesting leave provide, and these
labor or services are needed for the small employer to operate at a
minimal capacity. For reasons (1), (2), and (3), the employer may deny
paid sick leave or expanded family and medical leave only to those
otherwise eligible employees whose absence would cause the small
employer's expenses and financial obligations to exceed available
business revenue, pose a substantial risk, or prevent the small
employer from operating at minimum capacity, respectively.
Section 826.40(b)(2) explains that if a small employer decides to
deny paid sick leave or expanded family and medical leave to an
employee or employees whose child's school or place of care is closed,
or whose child care provider is unavailable, the small employer must
document the facts and circumstances that meet the criteria set forth
in Sec. 826.40(b)(1) to justify such denial. The employer should not
send such material or documentation to the Department, but rather
should retain such records for its own files.
In exercising its authority to exempt certain employers with fewer
than 50 employees, the Department balanced two potentially competing
objectives of the FFCRA. On the one hand, the leave afforded by the
FFCRA was designed to be widely available to employees to assist them
navigating the social and economic impacts of COVID-19 as well as
public and private efforts to contain and slow the spread of the virus.
On the other hand, the Department recognizes that FFCRA leave
entitlements have little value if they cause an employer to go out of
business and, in so doing, deny employees not only leave but also jobs.
In Sec. 826.40(b), the Department attempted to extend the leave
benefits as broadly as practicable, but not in circumstances that would
significantly increase the likelihood that small businesses would be
forced to close. The Department rejected alternative arrangements that
excessively favored either the extension of leave or exclusion of small
businesses or which imposed compliance requirements that were overly
burdensome, particularly in economic conditions resulting from COVID-
19.
Section 826.40(c) explains which public employers must comply with
the EPSLA and the EFMLEA. It uses the term ``Public Agency,'' which as
explained in the definitions section, has the same meaning as in
section 203(x) of the FLSA. Specifically, public agency means the
Government of the United States; the government of a State or political
subdivision of a State; or an agency of the United States (including
the United States Postal Service and Postal Regulatory Commission), a
State, or a political subdivision of a State; or any interstate
governmental agency. All covered public agencies must comply with both
the EPSLA and the EFMLEA regardless of the number of employees they
employ, although such employers may exclude employees who are health
care providers or emergency responders as described in Sec. 826.30(c).
Section 826.40(c) provides further information about which parts of
the Federal government must comply with these Acts. Because the EFMLEA
only amends Title I of the FMLA, only employers of employees covered by
Title I of the FMLA are subject to the requirements of the EFMLEA.
Employers of federal employees covered by Title II of the FMLA are not
subject to requirements of the EFMLEA.
Section 826.40(c) provides certain clarifications as to the EPSLA's
and the EFMLEA's applicability to public employers. It explains that
all public agencies must provide their eligible employees with paid
sick leave, subject to the exceptions set forth in Sec. 826.30(c)-(d).
In general, public agencies must also provide their eligible employees
with expanded family and medical leave, subject to the exceptions and
limitations set forth in Sec. 826.30(b)-(d). However, as Sec.
826.40(c) clarifies, only certain employees of the United States or
agencies of the United States (``federal employees'') are potentially
eligible to take expanded family and medical leave. Those who are
potentially eligible are the federal employees covered by Title I of
the FMLA. Those who are not potentially eligible for expanded family
and medical leave are the federal employees whose FMLA coverage is
found elsewhere, including in Title II of the FMLA (codified in Title 5
of the U.S. Code). Section 826.40(c)(i)-(viii) sets forth specific
examples of federal employees covered by Title I of the FMLA and
therefore potentially eligible for expanded family and medical leave.
E. Intermittent Leave
Section 826.50 outlines the circumstances and conditions under
which paid sick leave or expanded family and medical leave may be taken
intermittently under the FFCRA. In this section, the Department has
imported and applied to the FFCRA certain concepts of intermittent
leave from its FMLA regulations. However, it has also modified these
concepts and added additional limitations on the use of intermittent
leave in circumstances where the Department believes it is incompatible
with Congress' objectives to slow the spread of COVID-19.
One basic condition applies to all employees who seek to take their
paid sick leave or expanded family and medical leave intermittently--
they and their employer must agree. Absent agreement, no leave under
the FFCRA may be taken intermittently. Subsection (a) does not require
an employer and
[[Page 19337]]
employee to reduce to writing or similarly memorialize their agreement.
But, in the absence of a written agreement, there must be a clear and
mutual understanding between the parties that the employee may take
intermittent paid sick leave or intermittent expanded family and
medical leave, or both. Additionally, where an employer and employee
agree that the latter may take paid sick leave or expanded family and
medical leave intermittently, they also must agree on the increments of
time in which leave may be taken, as explained in subsections (b)(1)
and (c).
Section 826.50(c) provides that if an employer directs or allows an
employee to telework, subject to an agreement between the employer and
employee, the employee may take paid sick leave or expanded family and
medical leave intermittently, in any agreed increment of time, while
the employee is teleworking. This section intentionally affords
teleworking employees and employers broad flexibility under the FFCRA
to agree on arrangements that balance the needs of each teleworking
employee with the needs of the employer's business. Moreover, as
teleworking employees present no risk of spreading COVID-19 to work
colleagues, intermittent leave for any qualifying reason furthers the
statute's objective to contain the virus.
In contrast, employees who continue to report to an employer's
worksite may only take paid sick leave or expanded family and medical
leave intermittently and in any increment--subject to the employer and
employee's agreement--in circumstances where there is a minimal risk
that the employee will spread COVID-19 to other employees at an
employer's worksite. Therefore, subsection (b)(1) allows an employer
and employee who reports to an employer's worksite to agree that the
employee may take paid sick leave or expanded family and medical leave
intermittently solely to care for the employee's son or daughter whose
school or place of care is closed, or whose child care provider is
unavailable, because of reasons related to COVID-19. In this context,
the absence of confirmed or suspected COVID-19 in the employee's
household reduces the risk that the employee will spread COVID-19 by
reporting to the employer's worksite while taking intermittent paid
leave. This is not true, however, when the employee takes paid sick
leave for other qualifying reasons.
Subsection (b)(2) prohibits employees who report to an employer's
worksite from taking paid sick leave intermittently, notwithstanding
any agreement between the employer and employee to the contrary, if the
leave is taken because the employee: (1) Is subject to a Federal,
State, or local quarantine or isolation order related to COVID-19; (2)
has been advised by a health care provider to self-quarantine due to
concerns related to COVID-19; (3) is experiencing symptoms of COVID-19
and is taking leave to obtain a medical diagnosis; (4) is caring for an
individual who either is subject to a quarantine or isolation order
related to COVID-19 or has been advised by a health care provider to
self-quarantine due to concerns related to COVID-19; or (5) is
experiencing any other substantially similar condition specified by the
Secretary of Health and Human Services. As the Department explains in
subsection (b)(2), where paid leave is taken for these reasons, ``the
employee is, may be, or is reasonably likely to become, sick with
COVID-19, or is exposed to someone who is, may be, or is reasonably
likely to become, sick with COVID-19.'' In these situations, the
employee may not take intermittent leave due to the unacceptably high
risk that the employee might spread COVID-19 to other employees when
reporting to the employer's worksite. Once such an employee begins
taking paid sick leave for one or more of these qualifying reasons, the
employee must continue to take paid sick leave each day until the
employee either uses the full amount of paid sick leave or no longer
has a qualifying reason for taking paid sick leave. The Department
believes that such a requirement furthers Congress' objective to slow
the spread of COVID-19.
Finally, subsection (d) clarifies that where an employer and
employee have agreed that FFCRA leave may be taken intermittently, only
the amount of leave actually taken may be counted toward the employee's
leave entitlements. This is consistent with the requirements for
intermittent leave use under the FMLA and ensures that employees are
able to use the full leave entitlement.
F. Leave To Care for a Child Due to School or Place of Care Closure or
Child Care Unavailability--Intersection Between the EPSLA and the
EFMLEA
Both the EPSLA and the EFMLEA permit an employee to take paid leave
when needed to care for his or her son or daughter whose school or
place of care is closed, or child care provider is unavailable, due to
COVID-19 related reasons. Section 826.60 sets forth how the
requirements of the EFMLEA and the EPSLA interact when an employee
qualifies for both types of leave.
Generally, when an employee qualifies for leave under both Acts, an
employee may first use the two weeks of paid leave provided by the
EPSLA. This use runs concurrent with the first two weeks of unpaid
leave under the EFMLEA. Any remaining leave taken for this purpose is
paid under the EFMLEA.
Section 826.60 further explains that where an employee has already
taken some FMLA leave in the current twelve-month leave year as defined
by 29 CFR 825.200(b), the maximum twelve weeks of EFMLEA leave is
reduced by the amount of the FMLA leave entitlement taken in that year.
If an employee has exhausted his or her twelve workweeks of FMLA or
EFMLEA leave, he or she may still take EPSLA leave for a COVID-19
qualifying reason.
Section 826.60(b) addresses an employee's prior use of emergency
paid sick leave, which does not prevent the employee from taking
expanded family and medical leave. For example, if the employee takes
two weeks of paid sick leave for a qualifying reason under EPSLA
section 5102(a)(1)-(4) and (6), the employee has exhausted the paid
sick leave available to the employee under the EPSLA and may not take
additional paid sick leave for any qualifying reason. If the employee
then needs to take leave under the EFMLEA, the employee may do so, but
the first ten days of expanded family and medical leave may be unpaid.
The employee may, however, choose to substitute earned or accrued paid
leave, as provided by the employer's established policies.
[[Page 19338]]
G. Leave To Care for a Child Due to School or Place of Care Closure or
Child Care Unavailability--Intersection Between the EFMLEA and the FMLA
Section 826.70 addresses the interaction between the new
entitlement to take FMLA leave to care for an employee's child due to
school or place of care closure or child care unavailability under the
EFMLEA and an employee's entitlement to take FMLA leave for other
reasons, such as bonding with a newborn or newly placed child, for the
employee's own serious health condition, or to care for a covered
family member with a serious health condition. The EFMLEA amended the
FMLA to add a sixth reason to take the twelve-week FMLA entitlement: To
care for an employee's son or daughter whose school or place of care is
closed or child care provider is unavailable due to COVID-19 related
reasons.
Eligibility requirements for employees to take expanded family and
medical leave under the EFMLEA differ from standard FMLA leave. Not all
employees who are eligible to take expanded family and medical leave
will be eligible to take FMLA leave for other reasons. Employees only
need to have been employed for 30 calendar days in order to be eligible
for expanded family and medical leave to care for their child due to
school or place of care closure or child care unavailability under the
EFMLEA. In contrast, to be eligible to take FMLA leave for other
reasons, employees generally need to have worked for the employer for
at least twelve months, have 1,250 hours of service in the twelve-month
period prior to the leave, and work at a location where the employer
has at least 50 employees within 75 miles.
Employer coverage also differs under the EFMLEA and the FMLA. Most
significantly, the EFMLEA applies to all employers with fewer than 500
employees, while the FMLA generally does not apply to employers with
fewer than 50 employees. Further, employers of health care providers
and emergency responders may exclude such employees from the EFMLEA's
leave requirements, but not the FMLA's.
An employee's ability to take EFMLEA leave depends on his or her
use of FMLA leave during the 12-month FMLA leave year pursuant to 29
CFR 825.200(b) for a reason unrelated to COVID-19. If an employee has
already taken such leave, the employee may not be able to take the full
twelve weeks of expanded family and medical leave under the EFMLEA. For
example, if the employer uses the calendar year as the twelve-month
FMLA leave year and an employee took three weeks of leave in January
2020 for the employee's own serious health condition, the employee
would only have nine weeks of expanded family and medical leave
available. Additionally, employees are limited to a total of twelve
weeks of expanded family and medical leave under the EFMLEA, even if
the applicable time period (April 1 to December 31, 2020) spans two
twelve-month leave periods under the FMLA. Finally, for employees who
are eligible to take leave under the FMLA and the EFMLEA, and who take
leave to care for a service member with a serious injury or illness,
the total amount of leave available to the employee will be calculated
as set forth in 29 CFR 825.127(e).
As explained in the above discussion of Sec. 826.60, the first two
weeks of expanded family and medical leave may be unpaid and the
employee may substitute paid sick leave under the EPSLA or employer-
provided earned and accrued paid leave during this period. After the
first two weeks of leave, expanded family and medical leave is paid at
two-thirds the employee's regular rate of pay, up to $200 per day. See
Sec. 826.24. Because this period of expanded family and medical leave
is paid, the FMLA provision for substitution of the employee's accrued
paid leave is inapplicable, and neither the employee nor the employer
may require the substitution of paid leave. However, employers and
employees may agree, where Federal or state law permits, to have
accrued paid leave supplement the two-thirds pay under the EFMLEA so
that the employee receives the full amount of their normal pay. Federal
agencies generally lack authority to provide for such a supplement.
H. Employer Notice
Section 826.80 addresses the FFCRA requirement that employers post
and keep posted a notice of the law's requirements. As required by the
FFCRA, the Department made a model notice available on March 25, 2020,
and employers may, free of charge, download the poster (WHD1422 REV 03/
20) from the WHD website at https://www.dol.gov/whd. In addition to
posting the notice in a conspicuous place where employees or job
applicants at a worksite may view it, an employer may distribute the
notice to employees by email, or post the required notice
electronically on an employee information website to satisfy the FFCRA
requirement. An employer may also directly mail the required notice to
any employees who are not able to access information at the worksite,
through email, or online. An employer may post or distribute the
required information provided in the model notice in a different
format, as long as the content is accurate and readable. Although the
FFCRA does not require employers to provide a translated notice to
employees, the Department has issued a Spanish language version of the
poster. For employers who are covered by the EFMLEA but are not covered
by the other provisions of the FMLA, posting of this FFCRA notice
satisfies their FMLA general notice obligation. See 29 U.S.C. 2619; 29
CFR 825.300.
The Department is aware that employers newly affected by the EFMLEA
requirements of the FFCRA will not have established policies and
practices for administering FMLA leave. In consideration of these
employers, the number of employees who will be eligible to use the FMLA
for the first time for a limited period of time, and interruptions to
normal business operations from emergency conditions, the Department
did not adopt in the FFCRA employer notice regulations or employer
``specific notice'' obligations that are required in the FMLA
regulations. The FFCRA regulations do not require employers to respond
to employees who request or use EFMLEA leave with notices of
eligibility, rights and responsibilities, or written designations that
leave use counts against employees' FMLA leave allowances. However, an
employer that has established practices for providing individual
employees with specific notices compliant with the FMLA regulatory
guidance at 29 CFR 825.300 may prefer to apply their existing practices
to EFMLEA leave users.
I. Employee Notice of Need for Leave
Section 826.90 addresses an employee's notice to his or her
employer regarding the need to take leave. Section 826.90(a) explains
that for paid sick leave or expanded family and medical leave to care
for the employee's son or daughter whose school or place of care is
closed, or whose child care provider is unavailable, due to COVID-19
related reasons, an employer may require employees to follow reasonable
notice procedures as soon as practicable after the first workday or
portion of a workday for which an employee receives paid sick leave in
order to continue to receive such leave. Sections 826.90(b) and (c)
explain that it will be reasonable for an employer to require notice as
soon as practicable after the first workday is missed, and to require
that employees provide oral notice and sufficient information for an
employer
[[Page 19339]]
to determine whether the requested leave is covered by the FFCRA. The
employer may not require the notice to include documentation beyond
what is allowed by Sec. 826.100.
Section 826.90(d) states that it is reasonable for the employer to
require the employee to comply with the employer's usual notice
procedures and requirements, absent unusual circumstances. If an
employee fails to give proper notice, the employer should give him or
her notice of the failure and an opportunity to provide the required
documentation prior to denying the request for leave.
J. Documentation of Need for Leave
An employee must provide his or her employer documentation in
support of paid sick leave or expanded family and medical leave. As
provided in Sec. 826.100, such documentation must include a signed
statement containing the following information: (1) The employee's
name; (2) the date(s) for which leave is requested; (3) the COVID-19
qualifying reason for leave; and (4) a statement representing that the
employee is unable to work or telework because of the COVID-19
qualifying reason.
An employee must provide additional documentation depending on the
COVID-19 qualifying reason for leave. An employee requesting paid sick
leave under Sec. 826.20(a)(1)(i) must provide the name of the
government entity that issued the quarantine or isolation order to
which the employee is subject. An employee requesting paid sick leave
under Sec. 826.20(a)(1)(ii) must provide the name of the health care
provider who advised him or her to self-quarantine for COVID-19 related
reasons. An employee requesting paid sick leave under Sec.
826.20(a)(1)(iv) to care for an individual must provide either (1) the
government entity that issued the quarantine or isolation order to
which the individual is subject or (2) the name of the health care
provider who advised the individual to self-quarantine, depending on
the precise reason for the request. An employee requesting to take paid
sick leave under Sec. 826.20(a)(1)(v) or expanded family and medical
leave to care for his or her child must provide the following
information: (1) The name of the child being care for; (2) the name of
the school, place of care, or child care provider that closed or became
unavailable due to COVID-19 reasons; and (3) a statement representing
that no other suitable person is available to care for the child during
the period of requested leave.
For leave taken under the FMLA for an employee's own serious health
condition related to COVID-19, or to care for the employee's spouse,
son, daughter, or parent with a serious health condition related to
COVID-19, the normal FMLA certification requirements still apply. See
29 CFR 825.306.
K. Health Care Coverage
Section 826.110 explains that an employee who takes expanded family
and medical leave or paid sick leave is entitled to continued coverage
under the employer's group health plan on the same terms as if the
employee did not take leave. See 29 U.S.C. 2614(c); see also 29 U.S.C.
1182 and 26 CFR 54.9802-1(e)(2)(i); 29 CFR 2590.702(e)(2)(i) and 45 CFR
146.121(e)(2)(i) (providing that an employer cannot establish a rule
for group health plan eligibility or set any individual's premium or
contribution rate based on whether an individual is actively at work,
unless the employer treats employees who are absent from work on sick
leave as being actively at work). This rule defines ``group health
plan'' using the definition under the FMLA. See 29 CFR 825.102.
Maintenance of individual health insurance policies purchased by an
employee from an insurance provider, as described in 29 CFR 825.209(a),
is the responsibility of the employee.
Section 826.110(b)-(g) explains what an employer must do to
continue group health plan coverage on the same terms as if the
employee did not take paid sick leave or expanded family and medical
leave. These requirements are similar to the regulatory requirements
for employers when employees take FMLA leave for other reasons. In
particular, while an employee is taking paid sick leave or expanded
family and medical leave, the employer must maintain the same group
health plan benefits provided to an employee and his or her family
members covered under the plan prior to taking leave--including medical
care, surgical care, hospital care, dental care, eye care, mental
health counseling, substance abuse treatment, and other benefit
coverage. This requirement also applies to benefits provided through a
supplement to a group health plan, whether or not the supplement is
provided through a flexible spending account or other component of a
cafeteria plan.
Likewise, if an employer provides a new health plan (including a
new benefit package option) or benefits or changes health benefits or
plans while an employee is taking paid sick leave or expanded family
and medical leave, the employee is entitled to the new or changed plan/
benefits to the same extent as if the employee was not on leave. The
employer must give the employee notice of any opportunity to change
plans or benefits, and if the employee requests the changed coverage it
must be provided by the employer.
Employees in a group health plan who take paid sick leave or
expanded family and medical leave remain responsible for paying the
same portion of the plan premium that the employee paid prior to taking
leave. If premiums are adjusted, the employee is required to pay the
new employee premium contribution on the same terms as other employees.
The employee's share of premiums must be paid by the method normally
used during any paid leave; in many cases, this will be through a
payroll deduction. For unpaid leave, or where the pay provided by the
EFMLEA or the EPSLA is insufficient to cover the employee's premiums,
the rule directs employers to 29 CFR 825.210(c), which specifies how
employers can obtain payment. If an employee chooses not to retain
group health plan coverage while taking paid sick leave or expanded
family and medical leave, the employee is entitled upon returning from
leave to be reinstated on the same terms as prior to taking the leave,
including family member coverage.
L. Multiemployer Plans
An employer that is a signatory to a multiemployer collective
bargaining agreement may satisfy its obligations under the EFMLEA and
the EPSLA by making contributions to a multiemployer fund, plan, or
other program consistent with its bargaining obligations and its
collective bargaining agreement. The contributions must be based on the
amount of paid sick leave and expanded family and medical leave to
which the employee is entitled under the applicable provisions of the
FFCRA based on each employee's work under the multiemployer collective
bargaining agreement. The fund, plan, or other program must allow
employees to obtain their pay for the leave to which they are entitled
under the FFRCA.
Alternatively, an employer that is part of a multiemployer
collective bargaining agreement may choose to satisfy its obligations
under the FFCRA by means other than through contribution to a plan,
fund, or program, provided they are consistent with its bargaining
obligations and collective bargaining agreement.
M. Return to Work
Section 826.130 describes an employee's right to return to work
after taking paid leave under the EPSLA or the EFMLEA. In most
instances, an employee is entitled to be restored to
[[Page 19340]]
the same or an equivalent position upon return from paid sick leave or
expanded family and medical leave in the same manner that an employee
would be returned to work after FMLA leave. See the FMLA job
restoration provisions at 29 CFR 825.214 and the FMLA equivalent
position provisions at 29 CFR 825.215.
However, the new statute does not protect an employee from
employment actions, such as layoffs, that would have affected the
employee regardless of whether the leave was taken. The employer must
be able to demonstrate that the employee would have been laid off even
if he or she had not taken leave. This provision tracks the existing
provision under the FMLA in 29 CFR 825.216. The employer has the same
burden of proof to show that an employee would not otherwise have been
employed at the time reinstatement is requested in order to deny
restoration to employment.
The EFMLEA amendments to the FMLA specify that the FMLA's
restoration provision in 29 U.S.C. 2614(a)(1) does not apply to an
employer who has fewer than twenty-five employees if all four of the
following conditions are met:
(a) The employee took leave to care for his or her son or daughter
whose school or place of care was closed or whose child care provider
was unavailable;
(b) The employee's position no longer exists due to economic or
operating conditions that (i) affect employment and (ii) are caused by
a public health emergency (i.e., due to COVID-19 related reasons)
during the period of the employee's leave;
(c) The employer made reasonable efforts to restore the employee to
the same or an equivalent position; and
(d) If the employer's reasonable efforts to restore the employee
fail, the employer makes reasonable efforts for a period of time to
contact the employee if an equivalent position becomes available. The
period of time is specified to be one year beginning either on the date
the leave related to COVID-19 reasons concludes or the date twelve
weeks after the employee's leave began, whichever is earlier.
In addition, as these provisions amend the FMLA, the existing
limitation to job restoration for ``key'' employees is applicable to
leave taken under the EFMLEA. The FMLA's key employee regulations are
in 29 CFR 825.217.
N. Recordkeeping
Section 826.140 explains that an employer is required to retain all
documentation provided pursuant to Sec. 826.100 for four years,
regardless of whether leave was granted or denied. If an Employee
provided oral statements to support his or her request for paid sick
leave or expanded family and medical leave, the employer is required to
document and retain such information for four years. If an employer
denies an employee's request for leave pursuant to the small business
exemption under Sec. 826.40(b), the employer must document its
authorized officer's determination that the prerequisite criteria for
that exemption are satisfied and retain such documentation for four
years. Section 826.140 also explains what documents the employer should
create and retain to support its claim for tax credits from the
Internal Revenue Service (IRS). A more detailed explanation of how
Employers may claim tax credits can be found at https://www.irs.gov/forms-pubs/about-form-7200 and https://www.irs.gov/pub/irs-drop/n-20-21.pdf.
O. Prohibited Acts and Enforcement
Sections 826.150 and 826.151 describe certain acts that are
prohibited under the EPSLA and the EFMLEA, as well as enforcement
mechanisms.
Section 826.150(a) explains that, under the EPSLA, employers are
prohibited from discharging, disciplining, or discriminating against
any employee because the employee took paid sick leave, initiated a
proceeding under or related to paid sick leave, or testified or is
about to testify in such a proceeding.
Section 826.150(b) explains that an employer who violates the paid
sick leave requirements is considered to have failed to pay the minimum
wage required by section 6 of the FLSA, and an employer who violates
the prohibition on discharge, discipline, or discrimination described
in section 826.150(a) is considered to have violated section 15(a)(3)
of the FLSA. See 29 U.S.C. 206, 215(a)(3). With respect to such
violations, the relevant enforcement provisions of sections 16 and 17
of the FLSA apply. See 29 U.S.C. 216, 217.
For instance, an employee may maintain, on behalf of the employee
and any other similarly-situated employees, an action in any federal or
state court of competent jurisdiction to recover an amount equal to the
federal minimum wage for each hour of paid sick leave denied, an
additional equal amount as liquidated damages, and an amount for costs
and reasonable attorney's fees. Moreover, the Secretary may bring an
action against an employer to recover an amount equal to the Federal
minimum wage for each hour of paid sick leave denied, and an additional
equal amount as liquidated damages, or to obtain an injunction against
the employer. Finally, in the case of a repeated or willful violation,
the employer shall also be subject to a civil penalty for each
violation, and liable in an additional amount, as liquidated damages,
equal to the minimum wage for each hour of paid sick leave denied.
Section 826.151(a) explains that, for purposes of the EFMLEA,
employers are subject to the prohibitions that apply with respect to
all FMLA leave, which are set forth at 29 U.S.C. 2615. Specifically,
employers are prohibited from interfering with, restraining, or denying
an employee's exercise of or attempt to exercise any right under the
FMLA, including the EFMLEA; discriminating against an employee for
opposing any practice made unlawful by the FMLA, including the EFMLEA;
or interfering with proceedings initiated under the FMLA, including the
EFMLEA.
Section 826.151(b) explains that, for purposes of the EFMLEA,
employers are subject to the enforcement provisions set forth in
section 107 of the FMLA, with one exception: an employee may not bring
a private action against an employer under the EFMLEA if the employer,
although subject to the EFMLEA, is not otherwise subject to the FMLA.
See 29 U.S.C. 2617; 29 CFR 825.400. In other words, an employee can
only bring an action against an employer under the EFMLEA if the
employer has had 50 or more employees for each working day during each
of twenty or more calendar workweeks in the current or preceding
calendar year, as required by section 101(4)(A)(i) of the FMLA.
Section 826.152 provides that employees may file complaints
alleging violations of the EPSLA and/or the EFMLEA with WHD.
Section 826.153 sets out the Secretary's investigative authority
under the EPSLA and the EFMLEA. Under the EPSLA, the Secretary may
investigate and gather data in the same manner as authorized by
sections 9 and 11 of the FLSA. See 29 U.S.C. 209, 211. Under the
EFMLEA, the Secretary may investigate and gather data in the same
manner as authorized by sections 106(a) and (d) of the FMLA. See 29
U.S.C. 2616(a), (d). The provisions authorize, among other things, the
Secretary to enter a workplace and have access to, inspect, and copy
documents, and/or require witness attendance and testimony, relating to
any matter under investigation, from any person or entity being
investigated or proceeded against,
[[Page 19341]]
at any stage of any proceeding or investigation, at any place in the
United States. They also permit the Secretary to compel the production
of relevant documents or testimony by subpoena as permitted by these
provisions of law, including that in the event of any failure or
refusal to comply with such a subpoena, the Secretary may obtain from
any district court in the United States an order to compel production
and/or testimony. Failure to obey such an order may be enforced through
contempt proceedings.
P. Effect of Other Laws, Employer Practices, and Collective Bargaining
Agreements
Section 826.160 discusses the effect of taking paid sick leave and
expanded family and medical leave on other rights, benefits, employer
practices, and collective bargaining agreements. The statutory
provisions underlying this section appear in the EPSLA.
Section 826.160(a)(1) explains that an employee's entitlement to,
or actual use of, paid sick leave is not grounds for diminishment,
reduction, or elimination of any other right or benefit to which the
employee is entitled under any other federal, state, or local law,
under any collective bargaining agreement, or under any employer policy
that existed prior to April 1, 2020. See 29 U.S.C. 2651(b), 2652. Paid
sick leave is in addition to, and not a substitute for, other sources
of leave which the employee had already accrued, was already entitled
to, or had already used, before the EPSLA became operational on April
1, 2020, and effective on April 2, 2020. Therefore, neither eligibility
for, nor use of, paid sick leave may count against an employee's
balance or accrual of any other source or type of leave.
Section 826.160(a)(2) explains that an employer may not deny an
employee paid sick leave or expanded family and medical leave on the
grounds that the employee has already taken another type of leave or
taken leave from another source, including leave taken for reasons
related to COVID-19. Regardless of how much other leave an employee has
taken up to the date he or she requests paid sick leave or expanded
family and medical leave, the employer must permit the employee to
immediately take any and all paid sick leave or expanded family and
medical leave to which he or she is entitled and eligible under the
EPSLA and the EFMLEA. However, the preceding analysis does not apply to
or affect the FMLA's twelve workweeks within a twelve-month period cap.
The Department interprets ``existing employer policy'' in section
5107(1)(C) of the FFCRA to include a COVID-19 related offering of paid
leave that the employer voluntarily issued prior to April 1, 2020, and
under which employees were offered more paid leave than under the
employer's standard or current policy. The Department acknowledges that
some employers voluntarily offered and provided such leave to help
their employees in this time of emergency. Nonetheless, the FFCRA still
requires those employers to provide the entirety of the paid sick leave
and expanded family and medical leave to which its employees are
eligible, regardless of whether an employee took the additional paid
leave the employer voluntarily offered. Doing so is necessary to ensure
all eligible employees receive the full extent of paid sick leave and
expanded family and medical leave to which they are entitled under the
EPSLA and the EFMLEA. However, an employer may prospectively terminate
such a voluntary additional paid leave offering as of April 1, 2020, or
thereafter, provided that the employer had not already amended its
leave policy to reflect the voluntary offering. This means the employer
must pay employees for leave already taken under such an offering
before it is terminated, but the employer need not continue the
offering in light of the FFCRA taking effect.
Finally, the Department clarifies that employees do not have any
right or entitlement to use paid sick leave or expanded family and
medical leave retroactively, meaning they have no right or entitlement
to be paid through paid sick leave or expanded family and medical leave
for any unpaid or partially paid leave taken before April 1, 2020.
Section 826.160(b) explains the sequencing of paid sick leave with
other types of leave. Pursuant to section 5102 of the FFRCA, an
employee may choose to use paid sick leave prior to using any other
type of paid leave to which he or she is entitled under any other
Federal, State, or local law; collective bargaining agreement; or
employer policy that existed prior to April 1, 2020. As this decision
is at the employee's discretion, Sec. 826.160(b)(2) clarifies that no
employer shall require, coerce, or unduly influence an employee to use
another source of paid leave before taking paid sick leave. Of course,
an employer may not require or influence an employee to use unpaid
leave prior to taking paid sick leave; doing so would be akin to
denying or attempting to deny the employee the paid sick leave to which
he or she is entitled.
Section 826.160(c) explains the sequencing of expanded family and
medical leave with other types of leave. No employer shall require,
coerce, or unduly influence an employee to use another source of paid
leave before taking expanded family and medical leave. However, an
eligible employee may elect to use, or an employer may require that an
employee use, leave the employee has available under the employer's
policies to care for a child, such as vacation or personal leave or
paid time off, concurrently. If expanded family and medical leave is
used concurrently with another source of paid leave, then the employer
has to pay the employee the full amount to which the employee is
entitled under the employer's preexisting paid leave policy for the
period of leave taken, even if that amount is greater than $200 per day
or $10,000 in the aggregate. But the employer's eligibility for tax
credits is still limited to the cap of $200 per day or $10,000 in the
aggregate.
Section 826.160(d)-(e) explains that an employer has no obligation
to provide, and an employee has no right or entitlement to receive,
financial compensation or other reimbursement for unused paid sick
leave or unused expanded family and medical leave in the event the
employee's employment ends after April 1, 2020, but before the FFCRA's
expiration on December 31, 2020. Moreover, the Department interprets
sections 5107(2) and 5109 of the FFCRA to mean that no employer has an
obligation to provide, and no employee or former employee has a right
or entitlement to receive, financial compensation or other
reimbursement for unused paid sick leave or unused expanded family and
medical leave upon or after the FFCRA's expiration on December 31,
2020.
Section 826.160(f) explains that any one individual employee is
limited to a maximum of two weeks (80 hours) paid sick leave as
described in Sec. 826.160. Thus, the absolute upper limit of 80 hours
of paid sick leave to which one could potentially be eligible is per
person and not per job. Should an employee change positions during the
period of time in which the paid sick leave is in effect, he or she is
not entitled to a new round of paid sick leave. Once an employee takes
the maximum 80 hours of paid sick leave, he or she is not entitled to
any paid sick leave from a subsequent employer. If an employee changes
positions before taking 80 hours of paid sick leave, then his or her
new employer (if covered by FFCRA) must provide paid sick leave
[[Page 19342]]
until the employee has taken 80 hours of paid sick leave total
regardless of the employer providing it.
IV. Statutory and Regulatory Requirements
A. Administrative Procedure Act
This rule is issued without prior notice and opportunity to comment
and with an immediate effective date pursuant to the Administrative
Procedure Act (APA). 5 U.S.C. 553(b) and (d).
1. Good Cause To Forgo Notice and Comment Rulemaking
The APA, 5 U.S.C. 553(b)(B), authorizes an agency to issue a rule
without prior notice and opportunity to comment when the agency, for
good cause, finds that those procedures are ``impracticable,
unnecessary, or contrary to the public interest.'' The FFCRA authorizes
the Department to issue regulations under the EPSLA and the EFMLEA
pursuant to the good cause exception of the APA. FFCRA sections 3102(b)
(adding FMLA section 110(a)(3)), 5111.
The Department is bypassing advance notice and comment because of
the exigency created by sections 3106 and 5108 of the FFCRA, which go
into effect on April 1, 2020, and expire on December 31, 2020. The
COVID-19 pandemic has escalated at a rapid pace and scale, leaving
American families with difficult choices in balancing work, child care,
and the need to seek medical attention for illness caused by the virus.
To avoid economic harm to American families facing these conditions, a
decision to undertake notice and comment rulemaking would likely delay
final action on this matter by weeks or months, and would, therefore,
complicate and likely preclude the Department from successfully
exercising the authority created by sections 3106 and 5108. Moreover,
such delay would be counter to one of the FFCRA's main purposes in
establishing paid leave: enabling employees to leave the workplace now
to help prevent the spread of COVID-19.
2. Good Cause To Proceed With an Immediate Effective Date
The APA also authorizes agencies to make a rule effective
immediately, upon a showing of good cause, instead of imposing a 30-day
delay. 5 U.S.C. 553(d)(3). The FFCRA authorizes the Department to issue
regulations that are effective immediately under the EPSLA and the
EFMLEA pursuant to the good cause exception of the APA. FFCRA sections
3102(b) (adding FMLA section 110(a)(3)), 5111; CARES Act section
3611(1)-(2). For the reasons stated above, the Department has concluded
it has good cause to make this temporary rule effective immediately and
until the underlying statute sunsets on December 31, 2020.
B. Executive Order 12866, Regulatory Planning and Review; and Executive
Order 13563, Improved Regulation and Regulatory Review
1. Introduction
Under E.O. 12866, OIRA determines whether a regulatory action is
significant and therefore, subject to the requirements of the E.O. and
OMB review. Section 3(f) of E.O. 12866 defines a ``significant
regulatory action'' as an action that is likely to result in a rule
that (1) has an annual effect on the economy of $100 million or more,
or adversely affects in a material way a sector of the economy,
productivity, competition, jobs, the environment, public health or
safety, or state, local, or tribal governments or communities (also
referred to as economically significant); (2) creates serious
inconsistency or otherwise interferes with an action taken or planned
by another agency; (3) materially alters the budgetary impacts of
entitlement grants, user fees, or loan programs, or the rights and
obligations of recipients thereof; or (4) raises novel legal or policy
issues arising out of legal mandates, the President's priorities, or
the principles set forth in the E.O. As described below, this temporary
rule is economically significant. The Department has prepared a
Regulatory Impact Analysis (RIA) in connection with this rule, as
required under section 6(a)(3) of Executive Order 12866, and OMB has
reviewed the rule. OIRA has designated this rule as a ``major rule'',
as defined by 5 U.S.C. 804(2).
Executive Order 13563 directs agencies to propose or adopt a
regulation only upon a reasoned determination that its benefits justify
its costs; the regulation is tailored to impose the least burden on
society, consistent with achieving the regulatory objectives; and in
choosing among alternative regulatory approaches, the agency has
selected those approaches that maximize net benefits. Executive Order
13563 recognizes that some benefits are difficult to quantify and
provides that, where appropriate and permitted by law, agencies may
consider and discuss qualitatively values that are difficult or
impossible to quantify, including equity, human dignity, fairness, and
distributive impacts.
2. Overview of the Rule
The rule implements the EPSLA and the EFMLEA, as modified by the
CARES Act. The EPSLA requires that certain employers provide two
workweeks (up to 80 hours) of paid sick leave to eligible employees who
need to take leave from work for specified reasons. The EFMLEA requires
that certain employers provide up to twelve weeks of expanded family
and medical leave to eligible employees who need to take leave from
work because the employee is caring for his or her son or daughter
whose school or place of care is closed or child care provider is
unavailable due to COVID-19 related reasons. Payments from employers to
employees for such paid leave, as well as allocable costs related to
the maintenance of health benefits during the period of the required
leave, is to be reimbursed by the Department of the Treasury via tax
credits, up to statutory limits, as provided under the FFCRA.
3. Economic Impacts
The Department estimated the number of affected employers and
quantified the costs associated with this temporary rule. The paid sick
leave and the expanded family and medical leave provisions of the FFCRA
both apply to employers with fewer than 500 employees. The 2017
Statistics of U.S. Businesses (SUSB) reports that there are 5,976,761
private firms in the U.S. with fewer than 500 employees.\5\ This
temporary rule says that small employers with fewer than 50 employees
may qualify for an exemption from the requirement to provide leave due
to school or place of care closings or child care unavailability if the
leave payments would jeopardize the viability of their business as a
going concern. The 2017 SUSB reports that there are 5,755,307 private
firms with fewer than 50 employees, representing 96 percent of all
impacted firms (firms with fewer than 500 employees). The employers who
are not able to qualify for the exemption discussed above are those
with fewer than 500 employees but greater than or equal to 50
employees. Using the SUSB data mentioned above, the Department
estimates that there are 221,454 firms that meet this criteria.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\5\ Statistics of U.S. Businesses 2017, https://www.census.gov/data/tables/2017/econ/susb/2017-susb-annual.html, 2017 SUSB Annual
Data Tables by Establishment Industry.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Although the rule exempts certain health care providers and
emergency responders from the definition of eligible employee for
purposes of the FFCRA, their employers may have some
[[Page 19343]]
employees who do not meet this definition, so these employers may still
be impacted by the provisions of the FFCRA.
The Department estimates that employees who work for employers with
fewer than 500 employees could potentially benefit from this rule.
According to the 2017 SUSB data, the 5,976,761 firms that meet this
criteria employ 60,556,081 workers. Not all eligible employees will
require use of the paid sick leave or expanded family and medical leave
provisions of the FFCRA. The Department lacks data to determine how
many employees will use this leave, which type of leave they will use
and for what reason, and the wages of those who will use the leave.
Certain health care providers and emergency responders may be
excluded from this group of impacted employees. The rule defines health
care provider to include anyone employed at any doctor's office,
hospital, health care center, clinic, post-secondary educational
institution offering health care instruction, medical school, local
health department or agency, nursing facility, retirement facility,
nursing home, home health care provider, any facility that performs
laboratory or medical testing, pharmacy, or any similar institution.
According to the SUSB data mentioned above, employers with fewer than
500 employees in the health care and social assistance industry employ
9.0 million workers.\6\ This estimate is likely to be the upper bound
of potentially exempt health care industry workers, because it could
include workers that may not be employed at an institution covered by
the exemption. This estimate may not, however, include employees who
provide services to the health care industry. The SUSB data does not
include further industry breakouts, and so the Department is unable to
determine the exact number of workers employed at these organizations
with fewer than 500 employees.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\6\ Statistics of U.S. Businesses 2017, https://www.census.gov/data/tables/2017/econ/susb/2017-susb-annual.html, 2017 SUSB Annual
Data Tables by Establishment Industry.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
The rule defines emergency responders as anyone necessary for the
provision of transport, care, healthcare, comfort and nutrition of such
patients, or others needed for the response to COVID-19. The rule
provides a list of occupations that includes but is not limited to
military or National Guard, law enforcement officers, correctional
institution personnel, fire fighters, emergency medical services
personnel, physicians, nurses, public health personnel, emergency
medical technicians, paramedics, emergency management personnel, 911
operators, child welfare workers and service providers, and public
works personnel. Because this list consists of occupations spread
across various industries, the Department is unable to use the SUSB
data to determine the magnitude of potential affected emergency
responders. According to the May 2018 BLS Occupational Employment and
Wages estimates, these occupations have a combined employment of 4.4
million.\7\ This may be an over count or an under count of the
potentially exempt emergency responders. The estimate may be an over
count because it includes employees who work for employers of all
sizes, not just those with fewer than 500 employees. The estimate may
be an under count because it does not include military or national
guard, as they are not counted in the OES estimates.
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\7\ Occupational Employment and Wages, May 2018, https://www.bls.gov/oes/2018/may/oes131141.htm. The Department used SOC
codes 29-1060 (Physicians and Surgeons), 29-1141 (Registered
Nurses), 29-1171 (Nurse Practitioners), 29-2041 (Emergency Medical
Technicians and Paramedics), 33-2000 (Fire Fighting and Prevention
Workers), and 33-3000 (Law Enforcement Workers), to represent the
occupations listed in the rule.
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i. Costs
This temporary rule implementing the paid sick leave and expanded
family and medical leave provisions of the FFCRA will result in four
different categories of costs to employers: Rule familiarization costs,
documentation costs, costs of posting a notice, and other managerial
and operating costs. The temporary rule will also result in increased
costs to the Department to administer the rule and handle complaints
and claims related to the provisions of the Acts.
a. Rule Familiarization Costs
The Department estimates that all employers with fewer than 500
employees will need to review the rule to determine their
responsibilities. For those 5,755,307 employers with fewer than 50
employees, they will need to review the rule to determine what the
rules are for all businesses, what the small employer exemptions are,
and how to either comply or show that the requirements of the rule
would jeopardize the viability of their business. The Department
estimates that these small employers will likely spend one hour to
understand their responsibilities under the rule. For the 221,454
employers with fewer than 500 employees, but greater than or equal to
50 employees, they will likely need to spend one hour to read the rule
and determine their responsibilities to provide paid sick leave and
expanded family and medical leave. The Department estimates that this
will be a one-time rule familiarization cost, as the provisions of the
Act sunset on December 31, 2020.
The Department's analysis assumes that the rule would be reviewed
by Compensation, Benefits, and Job Analysis Specialists (SOC 13-1141)
or employees of similar status and comparable pay. The median hourly
wage for these workers is $30.29 per hour.\8\ In addition, the
Department also assumes that benefits are paid at a rate of 46 percent
\9\ and overhead costs are paid at a rate of 17 percent of the base
wage, resulting in a fully-loaded hourly wage of $49.37.\10\ The
Department estimates that the total rule familiarization cost to
employers with fewer than 50 employees, who spend one hour reviewing
the rule, will be $284,139,507 (5,755,307 firms x 1 hour x $49.37). The
Department estimates that the total rule familiarization cost to
employers with greater than or equal to 50 but fewer than 500 employees
will be $10,933,184 (221,454 firms x 1 hour x $49.37). Total rule
familiarization costs for all impacted firms will therefore be
$295,072,691.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\8\ Occupational Employment and Wages, May 2018, https://www.bls.gov/oes/2018/may/oes131141.htm.
\9\ The benefits-earnings ratio is derived from the Bureau of
Labor Statistics' Employer Costs for Employee Compensation data
using variables CMU1020000000000D and CMU1030000000000D.
\10\ $30.29 + $30.29(0.46) + $30.29(0.17) = $49.37.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
b. Costs of Documentation
Employers with fewer than 50 employees are able to be exempt from
providing paid sick leave for child care purposes and expanded family
and medical leave under the FFCRA if they are able to show that
complying with the requirements would jeopardize the viability of their
business as a going concern. These employers will need to demonstrate
this burden, and to show that they are exempt. These small employers
must document the facts and circumstances to demonstrate this burden if
they have employees who are requesting paid sick leave or expanded
family and medical leave. Although the employers are not required to
send such material or documentation to the Department, they are
required to retain such records for their own files. Some employers
will not qualify for the exemption. The Department lacks specific data
to estimate the number of small employers who will use the exemption,
but the Department assumes
[[Page 19344]]
that until the end of the year, potentially up to 10 percent of these
5,755,307 employers (575,531) will likely document that the
requirements of the Act will jeopardize the viability of their
businesses. The Department estimates that each of these employers will
spend one hour for creating and documenting these records. Costs of
documentation for these small employers will therefore be $28,413,965
(575,531 firms x 1 hour x $49.37).
Employers are required to retain all records or documentation
provided by the employee prior to taking paid sick leave or expanded
family and medical leave. When employees take expanded family and
medical leave, employees must provide their employers with appropriate
documentation in support of such leave. Employers must retain this
documentation, as it may be required for tax credits and other purposes
under the FFCRA. For the 221,454 employers with between 50 and 500
employees, the Department estimates that they will spend an additional
one hour, on average, on documentation associated with this rule. For
the 5,755,307 employers with fewer than 50 employees, the Department
assumes that they will spend 30 minutes, on average, on documentation
associated with this rule. The time spent by small employers will be
lower because they have fewer employees, and some of them will be able
to use the small business exemption from the requirement to provide
leave due to school or childcare closings. The Department believes an
average of one hour or 30 minutes is appropriate for the year, because
some employers will not have any employees that will request leave, so
will therefore not need any documentation, while other employers will
have multiple employees requesting this leave. Documentation costs for
these employers will therefore be $153,002,937 (5,755,307 x 0.5 hours x
$49.37) + (221,454 x 1 hour x $49.37).
Total documentation costs for employers of all sizes are therefore
estimated to be $181,416,902 ($28,413,965 + $153,002,937).
c. Costs of Posting a Notice
Section 5103(a) of the FFCRA requires employers to post a notice to
inform their employees of the requirements of the EPSLA. The notice
must be posted in a conspicuous place on the premises of the employer
where notices to employees are customarily posted, or emailed or direct
mailed to employees, or posted electronically on an employee
information internal or external website. All employers covered by the
paid sick leave and expanded family and medical leave provisions of the
FFCRA are required to post this notice. The Department estimates that
all 5,976,761 employers with fewer than 500 employees will post this
notice, and that 99 percent of employers (5,916,993) will post the
information electronically while 1 percent (59,768) will physically
post the notice on employee bulletin boards. The Department estimates
that it will take 15 minutes (or 0.25 hours) for employers posting the
provision electronically to prepare and post the provision, and it will
take 75 minutes (or 1.25 hours) for employers posting the notice
manually to prepare the notice and post it in a conspicuous place where
notices to employees are customarily posted. Employers who post
electronically will incur a one-time cost of $73,030,486 (5,916,993 x
0.25 x $49.37) and those who physically post the notice will incur a
one-time cost of $3,688,433 (59,768 x 1.25 x $49.37). Therefore, the
total cost of posting this notice will be $76,718,919. Employers may
also incur a small cost of manually producing the notices, including
paper, printer ink, etc., but the Department believes that this cost
will be minimal compared to the cost of the time spent preparing and
posting the notice.
d. Other Managerial and Operating Costs
In order to comply with the paid sick leave and expanded family and
medical leave provisions of the FFCRA, employers may incur additional
managerial and operating costs that the Department is unable to
quantify. For example, when employees require the use of this paid
leave, employers will need to determine if their employees are eligible
for the leave, and will need to calculate the amount that an employee
should receive, and will need to make the adjustments to an employee's
paycheck, and will also need to adjust bookkeeping practices to track
the amount of leave used by an employee. Because the Department lacks
data on how many employees will require either paid sick leave or
expanded family and medical leave through the end of the year, the
total managerial and operation costs incurred by employers cannot be
quantified. However, for illustrative purposes, for each employee that
requires the use of this leave, the Department estimates it will take
an employer two hours to complete these additional tasks. If these
tasks are performed by a Compensation, Benefits, and Job Analysis
Specialist with a fully-loaded hourly wage of $49.37, then the cost to
each employer per employee requiring leave is $98.74. The Department
estimates that all 5,976,761 firms with fewer than 500 employees could
potentially incur this cost, but is unable to determine the extent to
which leave will be used by employees given the various eligibility
requirements, and therefore cannot estimate the total managerial and
operation costs incurred.
There are likely other costs to employers for which the Department
is unable to quantify in part because the number of employees who will
qualify for leave under the FFCRA and take such leave at each employer
is unknown and because the productivity losses caused by employees
taking leave likely vary by employer and for each individual employee,
but which are discussed qualitatively here. The new paid leave
provisions of the Act may result in an increase in the number of
employees who take advantage of sick leave and family and medical
leave, compared to the number of employees who would use leave absent
the new provisions. When an employee takes leave, the overall
productivity of the business likely will suffer (although there could
be some offsetting productivity improvements if coworkers are less
likely to become infected) and, in some instances, the business may
face unique operational challenges which could hinder its ability to
continue operations for the same duration or at the same capacity as
before the employee(s) took leave. These costs are difficult to
quantify, but likely will be significant, especially if a large number
of employees are eligible for, and take, leave. These costs are not
created specifically because of any unique features of this temporary
rule, but are directly linked to the statute's leave provisions.
e. Costs to the Department
WHD will also incur costs associated with the paid sick leave and
expanded family and medical leave provisions of the FFCRA. Prior to
this Act, WHD had not enforced a comprehensive paid sick leave program
applicable to a large segment of the U.S. workforce (minus the
exemptions). WHD will incur the additional costs of setting up a new
enforcement program, administering the program, and processing
complaints associated with this new provision. The Department does not
have data to assess this cost to the Department.
ii. Cost Summary
As discussed above, the quantified costs associated with the paid
sick leave and expanded family and medical leave provisions of the
FFCRA and with this temporary rule are rule familiarization
[[Page 19345]]
costs, costs of documentation, and the cost of posting a notice. Table
1 summarizes all of these costs in 2018 dollars. The Department
estimates that total costs in 2020 are $553 million.
[GRAPHIC] [TIFF OMITTED] TR06AP20.000
iii. Transfers
The transfers associated with this rule are the paid sick leave and
expanded family and medical leave that employees will receive as a
result of the FFCRA. The paid leave will initially be provided by
employers, who will then be reimbursed by the Department of the
Treasury through a tax credit, up to statutory limits, which is then
ultimately paid for by taxpayers (although there may be some offsetting
taxpayer effects due to statutory limits, which is then ultimately paid
for by taxpayers' reduced reliance on social assistance programs). Such
transfers may be reduced if employees opt to use or employers require
that employees use certain pre-existing leave (i.e., personal or
vacation leave or paid time off) concurrently with any EFMLEA leave. As
discussed above, the total number of employees who are potentially
eligible for this leave is as high as 61 million, but the number of
employees who will actually use the leave will be a smaller share of
this total. The Department does not know to what extent employees will
be exposed to COVID-19 themselves, will be subject to a Federal, State,
or local quarantine, will be caring for an individual exposed to COVID-
19, or will need to stay home to take care of a child out of school or
child care (and unable to telework), and therefore does not know how
many employees will require use of the paid leave provided in the Act.
In order to quantify the potential transfer, the Department would need
to determine the number of days of leave that would be taken, and the
monetary value of those days of leave. The FFCRA requires employers to
pay leave based on an employee's regular rate, so the Department would
need to determine the regular rate of each employee who requests leave.
This estimate could vary greatly depending on the occupations and
industries of employees requesting leave. The share of the regular rate
used to calculate the transfer would also depend on the reason for
which an employee requires the use of paid leave. The Department would
also need to determine the number of days each employee would take
leave, the type of leave employees would take, and whether EFMLEA leave
would run concurrently with certain previously-provided leave, all of
which would vary depending on whether they are taking paid sick leave
or expanded family and medical leave. If an employee requires the use
of paid sick leave to self-quarantine, they will likely take the entire
80 hours allotted, because the CDC's guidelines recommend a quarantine
period of two weeks. Additionally, an employee may take up to ten weeks
of paid expanded family and medical leave to care for his or her child
whose school or place of care is closed or child care provider is
unavailable. For school districts that have closed through the end of
the 2020 school year, it is likely that these parents would take the
entire twelve week allotment. The Department lacks data to determine
which employees will need leave, how many days of leave will ultimately
be used, and how much pay employers will be required to provide for
such leave. Although the Department is unable to quantify the transfer
of paid leave, we expect that it is likely to exceed $100 million in
2020.
iv. Benefits
The benefits of the paid sick leave and expanded family and medical
leave provisions of the FFCRA are vast, and although unable to be
quantified, are expected to greatly outweigh any costs of these
provisions. With the availability of paid leave, sick or potentially
exposed workers will be encouraged to stay home, thereby helping to
curb the spread of the virus and lessen the strain on hospitals and
health care providers. If employees still receive pay while on leave,
they will benefit from being able to cover necessary expenses, and to
continue to spend money to help support the economy. This will have
spillover effects not only on the individuals who receive pay while on
leave, but also on their communities and the national economy as a
whole, which is facing unique challenges due to the COVID-19 global
pandemic.
The expanded family and medical leave provisions of the FFCRA will
allow parents to care for their children who are out of school, or
whose childcare provider is unavailable due to COVID-19 related
reasons. This will allow parents to avoid extra childcare costs that
they otherwise may have to incur.
Without this paid sick leave and expanded family and medical leave
(that is, without the policy of tying some federal COVID-19 assistance
to employment arrangements), there could be long-term costs in addition
to the short term impacts listed above. For example, there could be
substantial rehiring costs for employers when the public health concern
has abated and, simultaneously, transition costs to workers as they
restart their careers. A spillover effect of these frictions might be
increased reliance on social assistance programs.
v. Regulatory Alternatives
The Department notes that the FFCRA delegates to the Secretary the
authority to issue regulations to ``exclude certain health care
providers and emergency responders from the definition of eligible
employee'' under section 110(a)(1)(A) of the EFMLEA and 5110(1) of the
EPSLA; ``to exempt small businesses with fewer than 50 employees from
the requirements'' of section 102(a)(1)(F) of EFMLEA and 5102(a)(5) of
the EPSLA ``when the imposition of such requirements would jeopardize
the viability of the business as a going concern''; and ``as necessary
to carry out the purposes of the EPSLA to ensure consistency between it
and Division C and Division G of the FFCRA.''
Because the FFCRA itself establishes the basic expanded family and
medical leave and paid sick leave requirements that the Department is
responsible for implementing, many potential regulatory alternatives
would be beyond the scope of the Department's authority in issuing this
temporary rule. The
[[Page 19346]]
Department considered two regulatory alternatives to determine the
correct balance between providing benefits to employees and imposing
compliance costs on covered employers. This section presents the two
alternatives to the provisions set forth in this temporary rule.
The Department considered one regulatory alternative that would be
less restrictive than what is currently being issued and two that would
be more restrictive. For the less-restrictive option, the Department
considered excluding all small businesses with fewer than 50 employees
from the requirements of the FFCRA, assuming that any requirement to
provide expanded family and medical leave or paid sick leave for child
care to their employees would jeopardize the viability of those small
businesses. The Department concluded, however, that requiring small
businesses to demonstrate that the viability of their business will be
jeopardized if they have to provide paid leave would ensure uniformity
among these employers, help the Department administer sections
102(a)(1)(F) of FMLA and 5102(a)(5) of the EPSLA, and would best
conform to the FFCRA.
For the first more restrictive alternative, the Department
considered requiring small businesses with fewer than 50 employees to
maintain formal records in order to demonstrate a need for exemption
from the rule's requirements. The Department concluded, however, that
this requirement would be unnecessarily onerous for these employers,
particularly given that they are not otherwise subject to the FMLA. The
Department believes that the requirements issued in this temporary rule
will ensure that small employers have the flexibility they need to
balance their staffing and business needs during the COVID-19 public
health emergency.
For the second more restrictive alternative, the Department
considered using a more narrow definition of health care provider and
emergency responder for purposes of excluding such employees from the
EPSLA's paid sick leave requirements and/or the EFMLEA's expanded
family and medical leave requirements. The Department considered only
allowing employers to exclude those workers who directly work with
COVID-19 patients, but felt that such a limitation would not provide
sufficient flexibility to the health care community to make necessary
staffing decisions to address the COVID-19 public health emergency.
Further, a more narrow definition could leave health care facilities
without staff to perform critical services needed to battle COVID-19.
C. Regulatory Flexibility Analysis
The Regulatory Flexibility Act of 1980 (RFA), 5 U.S.C. 601 et seq.,
as amended by the Small Business Regulatory Enforcement Fairness Act of
1996, Public Law 104-121 (March 29, 1996), requires federal agencies
engaged in rulemaking to consider the impact of their proposals on
small entities, consider alternatives to minimize that impact, and
solicit public comment on their analyses. The RFA requires the
assessment of the impact of a regulation on a wide range of small
entities, including small businesses, not-for-profit organizations, and
small governmental jurisdictions. Agencies must perform a review to
determine whether a proposed or final rule would have a significant
economic impact on a substantial number of small entities. 5 U.S.C. 603
and 604.
As discussed above, the Department calculated rule familiarization
costs, documentation costs, and the cost of posting a notice for all
employers with fewer than 500 employees. For employers with fewer than
50 employees, their one-time rule familiarization cost would be $49.37.
Their cost for documentation would be $24.69, and the cost of posting a
notice would be $12.84. Total cost to these employers would be $111.58.
An additional ten percent of employers with fewer than 50 employees
will have an additional documentation cost of $49.37 for qualifying for
the small employer exemption, bringing their total cost to $160.95. For
employers with at least 50 employees but fewer than 500 employees,
their one-time rule familiarization cost would be $49.37. Their cost
for documentation would be $49.37, and the cost of posting a notice
would be $12.84. The average managerial and operational cost to an
employer would be $98.74. Total cost to these employers would be
$210.32. These estimated costs will be minimal for small business
entities, and will be well below one percent of their gross annual
revenues, which is typically at least $100,000 per year for the
smallest businesses. Based on this determination, the Department
certifies that the rule will not have a significant economic impact on
a substantial number of small entities.
D. Unfunded Mandates Reform Act of 1995
The Unfunded Mandates Reform Act of 1995 (UMRA) requires agencies
to prepare a written statement for rules that include any federal
mandate that may result in increased expenditures by state, local, and
tribal governments, in the aggregate, or by the private sector, of $165
million ($100 million in 1995 dollars adjusted for inflation using the
CPI-U) or more in at least one year. This statement must: (1) Identify
the authorizing legislation; (2) present the estimated costs and
benefits of the rule and, to the extent that such estimates are
feasible and relevant, its estimated effects on the national economy;
(3) summarize and evaluate state, local, and tribal government input;
and (4) identify reasonable alternatives and select, or explain the
non-selection, of the least costly, most cost-effective, or least
burdensome alternative.
(1) Authorizing Legislation
This rule is issued pursuant to the FFCRA.
(2) Assessment of Quantified Costs and Benefits
For purposes of the UMRA, this rule includes a federal mandate that
is expected to result in increased expenditures of more than $165
million in the first year. Based on the cost analysis in this temporary
rule, the Department determined that the rule will result in Year 1
total costs for rule familiarization, documentation, and posting of
notices totaling $553 million (see Table 1). There will be no
additional costs incurred in subsequent years.
UMRA requires agencies to estimate the effect of a regulation on
the national economy if, at its discretion, such estimates are
reasonably feasible and the effect is relevant and material.\11\
However, OMB guidance on this requirement notes that such macroeconomic
effects tend to be measurable in nationwide econometric models only if
the economic effect of the regulation reaches 0.25 percent to 0.5
percent of GDP, or in the range of $51.5 billion to $102.9 billion
(using 2018 GDP). A regulation with smaller aggregate effect is not
likely to have a measurable effect in macroeconomic terms unless it is
highly focused on a particular geographic region or economic sector,
which is not the case with this rule. Given OMB's guidance, the
Department has determined that a full macroeconomic analysis is not
likely to show that these costs would have any measurable effect on the
economy.
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\11\ See 2 U.S.C. 1532(a)(4).
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(3) Least Burdensome Option Explained
The Department believes that it has chosen the least burdensome
option
[[Page 19347]]
given the FFCRA's provisions. Although the Department is requiring
small employers with fewer than 50 employees to maintain formal records
in order to demonstrate a need for exemption from the rule's
requirements they are not required to provide any documents to the
Department. The Department believes that the requirements issued in
this temporary rule will ensure that small employers have the
flexibility they need to balance their staffing and business needs
during the COVID-19 pandemic.
E. Executive Order 13132 (Federalism)
This rule does not have substantial direct effects on the States,
on the relationship between the National Government and the States, or
on the distribution of power and responsibilities among the various
levels of government. Therefore, in accordance with section 6 of
Executive Order No. 13132, 64 FR 43255 (Aug. 4, 1999), this rule does
not have sufficient federalism implications to warrant the preparation
of a federalism summary impact statement.
F. Executive Order 13175, Indian Tribal Governments
This rule would not have substantial direct effects on one or more
Indian tribes, on the relationship between the Federal Government and
Indian tribes, or on the distribution of power and responsibilities
between the Federal Government and Indian tribes.
G. Paperwork Reduction Act
The Paperwork Reduction Act of 1995 (PRA), 44 U.S.C. 3501 et seq.,
and its attendant regulations, 5 CFR part 1320, require the Department
to consider the agency's need for its information collections, their
practical utility, as well as the impact of paperwork and other
information collection burdens imposed on the public, and how to
minimize those burdens. The Department is seeking emergency approval
related to the collection of information described herein. Persons are
not required to respond to the information collection requirements
until OMB approves them under the PRA. This temporary rule creates a
new information collection specific to paid leave under the FFCRA. The
Department has created a new information collection request and
submitted the request to OMB for approval under OMB control number
1235-0NEW (Paid Leave under the Families First Coronavirus Response
Act) for this action.
Summary: Section 826.140(a) requires covered employer to document
and retain information submitted by an employees to support requests
for paid sick leave and expanded family and medical leave. Section
826.140(a) further requires any employer that denies a request for
leave pursuant to the small business exemption under Sec. 826.40(b)
must document and retain the determination by its authorizing officer
that it meets the criteria for that exemption. Finally, Sec.
826.140(c) advises, but does not require, employers to create and
maintain certain records for the purpose of obtaining a tax credit from
the Internal Revenue Service.
Purpose and Use: WHD and employees use employer records to
determine whether covered employers have complied with various
requirements under the FFCRA. Employers use the records to document
compliance with the FFCRA.
Technology: The regulations prescribe no particular order or form
of records, and employers may preserve records in forms of their
choosing, provided that facilities are available for inspection and
transcription of the records.
Minimizing Small Entity Burden: Although the FLSA recordkeeping
requirements do involve small businesses, including small state and
local government agencies, the Department minimizes respondent burden
by requiring no specific order or form of records in responding to this
information collection.
Total annual burden estimates, which reflect the new responses for
the recordkeeping information collection, are summarized as follows:
Type of Review: Approval of a new collection.
Agency: Wage and Hour Division, Department of Labor.
Title: Paid Leave under the Families First Coronavirus Response
Act.
OMB Control Number: 1235-0NEW.
Affected Public: Private Sector: businesses or other for-profits,
farms, and not-for-profit institutions: State, Local and Tribal
governments; and individuals or households.
Estimated Number of Respondents: 7,903,071.
Estimated Number of Responses: 7,903,071.
Estimated Burden Hours: 801,962 hours.
Estimated Time per Response: Various.
Frequency: Various.
Other Burden Cost: $4,255,500 (operations/maintenance).
List of Subjects in 29 CFR Part 826
Wages.
Signed at Washington, DC, this 1st day of April, 2020.
Cheryl M. Stanton,
Administrator, Wage and Hour Division.
0
For the reasons set out in the preamble, the Department of Labor amends
title 29 of the Code of Federal Regulations by adding part 826 to read
as follows:
PART 826--PAID LEAVE UNDER THE FAMILIES FIRST CORONAVIRUS RESPONSE
ACT
Sec.
826.10 General.
826.20 Paid leave entitlements.
826.21 Amount of Paid Sick Leave.
826.22 Amount of pay for Paid Sick Leave.
826.23 Amount of Expanded Family and Medical Leave.
826.24 Amount of pay for Expanded Family and Medical Leave.
826.25 Calculating the Regular Rate under the FFCRA.
826.30 Employee eligibility for leave.
826.40 Employer coverage.
826.50 Intermittent leave.
826.60 Leave to care for a Child due to School or Place of Care
closure or Child Care unavailability--intersection between the EPSLA
and the EFMLEA.
826.70 Leave to care for a Child due to School or Place of Care
closure or Child Care unavailability--intersection of the EFMLEA and
the FMLA.
826.80 Employer notice.
826.90 Employee notice of need for leave.
826.100 Documentation of need for leave.
826.110 Health care coverage.
826.120 Multiemployer plans.
826.130 Return to work.
826.140 Recordkeeping.
826.150 Prohibited acts and enforcement under the EPSLA.
826.151 Prohibited acts and enforcement under the EFMLEA.
826.152 Filing a complaint with the Federal Government.
826.153 Investigative authority of the Secretary.
826.160 Effect on other laws, employer practices, and collective
bargaining agreements.
Authority: Pub. L. 116-127 sections 3102(b) and 5111(3); Pub. L.
116-136 section 3611(7).
Sec. 826.10 General.
(a) Definitions. For the purposes of this rule:
Child Care Provider. The term ``Child Care Provider'' means a
provider who receives compensation for providing child care services on
a regular basis. The term includes a center-based child care provider,
a group home child care provider, a family child care provider, or
other provider of child care services for compensation that is
licensed, regulated, or registered under State law as described in
section 9858c(c)(2)(E) of Title 42; and satisfies the State and local
[[Page 19348]]
requirements, including those referred to in section 9858c(c)(2)(F) of
Title 42. Under the Families First Coronavirus Response Act (FFCRA),
the eligible child care provider need not be compensated or licensed if
he or she is a family member or friend, such as a neighbor, who
regularly cares for the Employee's child.
Commerce. The terms ``Commerce'' and ``industry or activity
affecting commerce'' mean any activity, business, or industry in
commerce or in which a labor dispute would hinder or obstruct commerce
or the free flow of commerce, and include ``commerce'', and any
``industry affecting commerce'', as defined in paragraphs (1) and (3)
of section 501 of the Labor Management Relations Act of 1947 (29 U.S.C.
142 (1) and (3)).
COVID-19. The term ``COVID-19'' has the meaning given the term in
section 506 of the Coronavirus Preparedness Response Supplemental
Appropriations Act, 2020.
EFMLEA. The term ``EFMLEA'' means the Emergency Family and Medical
Leave Expansion Act, Division C of the FFCRA.
Employee. The term ``Employee'' has the same meaning given that
term in section 3(e) of the Fair Labor Standards Act of 1938 (FLSA) (29
U.S.C. 203(e)).
Eligible Employee. For the purposes of the EFMLEA, the term
``Eligible Employee'' means an Employee who has been employed for at
least 30 calendar days by the Employer.
Employer:
(i) Subject to paragraph (ii) of this definition, ``Employer'':
(A) Means any person engaged in Commerce or in any industry or
activity affecting commerce that:
(1) In the case of a private entity or individual, employs fewer
than 500 Employees; and
(2) In the case of a Public Agency or any other entity that is not
a private entity or individual, employs one or more Employees;
(B) Includes:
(1) Any person acting directly or indirectly in the interest of an
employer in relation to an Employee (within the meaning of such phrase
in section 3(d) of the FLSA (29 U.S.C. 203(d));
(2) Any successor in interest of an employer;
(3) Joint employers as defined under the FLSA, part 791 of this
chapter, with respect to certain Employees; and
(4) Integrated employers as defined under the Family and Medical
Leave Act (FMLA), Sec. 825.104(c)(2) of this chapter.
(C) Includes any Public Agency; and
(D) Includes the Government Accountability Office and the Library
of Congress.
(ii) For purposes of the EPSLA, ``Employer'' also specifically
identifies the following as an employer:
(A) An entity employing a State Employee described in section
304(a) of the Government Employee Rights Act of 1991;
(B) An employing office, as defined in section 101 of the
Congressional Accountability Act of 1995;
(C) An employing office, as defined in 3 U.S.C. 411(c); and
(D) An Executive Agency as defined in section 5 U.S.C. 105, and
including the U.S. Postal Service and the Postal Regulatory Commission.
EPSLA. The term ``EPSLA'' means the Emergency Paid Sick Leave Act,
Division E of the FFCRA.
Expanded Family and Medical Leave. The term ``Expanded Family and
Medical Leave'' means paid leave under the EFMLEA.
FFCRA. The term ``FFCRA'' means the Families First Coronavirus
Response Act, Public Law 116-127.
FLSA Terms. The terms ``employ'', ``person'', and ``State'' have
the meanings given such terms in section 3 of the FLSA (29 U.S.C. 203).
Paid Sick Leave. The term ``Paid Sick Leave'' means paid leave
under the EPSLA.
Place of Care. The term ``Place of Care'' means a physical location
in which care is provided for the Employee's child while the Employee
works for the Employer. The physical location does not have to be
solely dedicated to such care. Examples include day care facilities,
preschools, before and after school care programs, schools, homes,
summer camps, summer enrichment programs, and respite care programs.
Public Agency. The term ``Public Agency'' means the Government of
the United States; the government of a State or political subdivision
thereof; any agency of the United States (including the United States
Postal Service and Postal Regulatory Commission), a State, or a
political subdivision of a State; or any interstate governmental
agency. See 29 U.S.C. 203(x); 29 U.S.C. 5110(2)(B)(i)(III). A Public
Agency shall be considered to be a person engaged in Commerce or in an
industry or activity affecting Commerce. See 29 U.S.C. 2611(4)(B); 29
U.S.C. 5110(2)(B)(ii). Whether an entity is a Public Agency, as
distinguished from a private Employer, is determined by whether the
agency has taxing authority, or whether the chief administrative
officer or board, etc., is elected by the voters-at-large or their
appointment is subject to approval by an elected official. See Sec.
825.108 of this chapter.
Public Health Emergency. The term ``Public Health Emergency'' means
an emergency with respect to COVID-19 declared by a Federal, State, or
local authority.
School. The term ``School'' means an ``elementary school'' or
``secondary school'' as such terms are defined below, in accordance
with section 8101 of the Elementary and Secondary Education Act of 1965
(20 U.S.C. 7801). ``Elementary school'' means a nonprofit institutional
day or residential school, including a public elementary charter school
that provides elementary education, as determined under State law.
``Secondary school'' means a nonprofit institutional day or residential
school, including a public secondary charter school that provides
secondary education, as determined under State law, except that the
term does not include any education beyond grade 12.
Secretary. The term ``Secretary'' means the Secretary of Labor or
his or her designee.
Son or Daughter. The term ``Son or Daughter'' has the meaning given
such term in section 101 of the FMLA (29 U.S.C. 2611). Accordingly, the
term means a biological, adopted, or foster child, a stepchild, a legal
ward, or a child of a person standing in loco parentis, who is under 18
years of age; or 18 years of age or older who is incapable of self-care
because of a mental or physical disability.
Subject to a quarantine or isolation order. For the purposes of the
EPSLA, a quarantine or isolation order includes quarantine, isolation,
containment, shelter-in-place, or stay-at-home orders issued by any
Federal, State, or local government authority that cause the Employee
to be unable to work even though his or her Employer has work that the
Employee could perform but for the order. This also includes when a
Federal, State, or local government authority has advised categories of
citizens (e.g., of certain age ranges or of certain medical conditions)
to shelter in place, stay at home, isolate, or quarantine, causing
those categories of Employees to be unable to work even though their
Employers have work for them.
Telework. The term ``Telework'' means work the Employer permits or
allows an Employee to perform while the Employee is at home or at a
location other than the Employee's normal workplace. An Employee is
able to Telework if: His or her Employer has work for the Employee; the
Employer permits the Employee to work from the
[[Page 19349]]
Employee's location; and there are no extenuating circumstances (such
as serious COVID-19 symptoms) that prevent the Employee from performing
that work. Telework may be performed during normal hours or at other
times agreed by the Employer and Employee. Telework is work for which
wages must be paid as required by applicable law and is not compensated
as paid leave under the EPSLA or the EFMLEA. Employees who are
teleworking for COVID-19 related reasons must be compensated for all
hours actually worked and which the Employer knew or should have known
were worked by the Employee. However, the provisions of Sec. 790.6 of
this chapter shall not apply to Employees while they are teleworking
for COVID-19 related reasons.
(b) Effective period. (1) This part became operational on April 1,
2020, and effective on April 2, 2020.
(2) This part expires on December 31, 2020.
Sec. 826.20 Paid Leave Entitlements.
(a) Qualifying reasons for Paid Sick Leave. (1) An Employer shall
provide to each of its Employees Paid Sick Leave to the extent that
Employee is unable to work due to any of the following reasons:
(i) The Employee is subject to a Federal, State, or local
quarantine or isolation order related to COVID-19;
(ii) The Employee has been advised by a health care provider to
self-quarantine due to concerns related to COVID-19;
(iii) The Employee is experiencing symptoms of COVID-19 and seeking
medical diagnosis from a health care provider;
(iv) The Employee is caring for an individual who is subject to an
order as described in this paragraph (a)(1)(i) or directed as described
in this paragraph (a)(1)(ii);
(v) The Employee is caring for his or her Son or Daughter whose
School or Place of Care has been closed for a period of time, whether
by order of a State or local official or authority or at the decision
of the individual School or Place of Care, or the Child Care Provider
of such Son or Daughter is unavailable, for reasons related to COVID-
19; or
(vi) The Employee has a substantially similar condition as
specified by the Secretary of Health and Human Services, in
consultation with the Secretary of the Treasury and the Secretary of
Labor. The substantially similar condition may be defined at any point
during the Effective Period. This rule became operational on April 1,
2020, and will be effective April 2, 2020, to December 31, 2020.
(2) Subject to a Quarantine or Isolation Order. Any Employee
Subject to a Quarantine or Isolation Order may take Paid Sick Leave for
the reason described in paragraph (a)(1)(i) of this section only if,
but for being subject to the order, he or she would be able to perform
work that is otherwise allowed or permitted by his or her Employer,
either at the Employee's normal workplace or by Telework. An Employee
Subject to a Quarantine or Isolation Order may not take Paid Sick Leave
where the Employer does not have work for the Employee as a result of
the order or other circumstances.
(3) Advised by a health care provider to self-quarantine. For the
purposes of this section, the term health care provider has the same
meaning as that term is defined in Sec. 825.102 of this chapter. An
Employee may take Paid Sick Leave for the reason described in paragraph
(a)(1)(ii) of this section only if:
(i) A health care provider advises the Employee to self-quarantine
based on a belief that--
(A) The Employee has COVID-19;
(B) The Employee may have COVID-19; or
(C) The Employee is particularly vulnerable to COVID-19; and
(ii) Following the advice of a health care provider to self-
quarantine prevents the Employee from being able to work, either at the
Employee's normal workplace or by Telework.
(4) Seeking medical diagnosis for COVID-19. An Employee may take
Paid Sick Leave for the reason described in paragraph (a)(1)(iii) of
this section if the Employee is experiencing any of the following
symptoms:
(i) Fever;
(ii) Dry cough;
(iii) Shortness of breath; or
(iv) Any other COVID-19 symptoms identified by the U.S. Centers for
Disease Control and Prevention.
(v) Any Paid Sick Leave taken for the reason described in paragraph
(a)(1)(iii) of this subsection is limited to time the Employee is
unable to work because the Employee is taking affirmative steps to
obtain a medical diagnosis, such as making, waiting for, or attending
an appointment for a test for COVID-19.
(5) Caring for an individual. For the purpose of paragraph
(a)(1)(iv) of this section, ``individual'' means an Employee's
immediate family member, a person who regularly resides in the
Employee's home, or a similar person with whom the Employee has a
relationship that creates an expectation that the Employee would care
for the person if he or she were quarantined or self-quarantined. For
this purpose, ``individual'' does not include persons with whom the
Employee has no personal relationship.
(6) An Employee may not take Paid Sick Leave for the reason
described in paragraph (a)(1)(iv) of this section unless, but for a
need to care for an individual, the Employee would be able to perform
work for his or her Employer, either at the Employee's normal workplace
or by Telework. An Employee caring for an individual may not take Paid
Sick Leave where the Employer does not have work for the Employee.
(7) An Employee may take Paid Sick Leave for the reason described
in paragraph (a)(1)(iv) of this section if the Employee is unable to
perform work for his or her Employer and if the individual depends on
the Employee to care of him or her and is either:
(i) Subject to a Quarantine or Isolation Order as described in
paragraph (a)(1)(ii) of this subsection; or
(ii) Has been advised to self-quarantine by a health care provider
because of a belief that--
(A) The individual has COVID-19;
(B) The individual may have COVID-19 due to known exposure or
symptoms
(C) The individual is particularly vulnerable to COVID-19.
(8) Caring for a Son or Daughter. An Employee has a need to take
Paid Sick Leave if he or she is unable to work due to a need to care
for his or her Son or Daughter whose School or Place of Care has been
closed, or whose Child Care Provider is unavailable, for reasons
related to COVID-19 only if no other suitable person is available to
care for the Son or Daughter during the period of such leave.
(9) An Employee may not take Paid Sick Leave to care for his or her
Son or Daughter unless, but for a need to care for the Son or Daughter,
the Employee would be able to perform work for his or her Employer,
either at the Employee's normal workplace or by Telework. An Employee
caring for his or her Son or Daughter may not take Paid Sick Leave
where the Employer does not have work for the Employee.
(b) Qualifying reason for Expanded Family and Medical Leave. An
Eligible Employee may take Expanded Family and Medical Leave because he
or she is unable to work due to a need to care for his or her Son or
Daughter whose School or Place of Care has been closed, or whose Child
Care Provider is unavailable, for reasons related to COVID-19. Eligible
Employee has need to take Expanded Family and Medical Leave for this
purpose only if no
[[Page 19350]]
suitable person is available to care for his or her Son or Daughter
during the period of such leave.
(1) An Eligible Employee may not take Expanded Family and Medical
Leave to care for his or her Son or Daughter unless, but for a need to
care for an individual, the Eligible Employee would be able to perform
work for his or her Employer, either at the Eligible Employee's normal
workplace or by Telework. An Eligible Employee caring for his or her
Son or Daughter may not take Expanded Family and Medical Leave where
the Employer does not have work for the Eligible Employee.
(2) [Reserved]
(c) Impact on FLSA exemptions. The taking of Paid Sick Leave or
Expanded Family and Medical Leave shall not impact an Employee's status
or eligibility for any exemption from the requirements of section 6 or
7, or both, of the FLSA.
Sec. 826.21 Amount of Paid Sick Leave.
(a) Full-time Employees. (1) A full-time Employee is entitled to up
to 80 hours of Paid Sick Leave.
(2) An Employee is considered to be a full-time Employee under this
section if he or she is normally scheduled to work at least 40 hours
each workweek.
(3) An Employee who does not have a normal weekly schedule under
Sec. 826.21(a)(2) is considered to be a full-time Employee under this
section if the average number of hours per workweek that the Employee
was scheduled to work, including hours for which the Employee took
leave of any type, is at least 40 hours per workweek over a period of
time that is the lesser of:
(i) The six-month period ending on the date on which the Employee
takes Paid Sick Leave; or
(ii) The entire period of the Employee's employment.
(b) Part-time Employees. An Employee who does not satisfy the
requirements of Sec. 826.21(a) is considered to be a part-time
Employee.
(1) If the part-time Employee has a normal weekly schedule, the
Employee is entitled to up to the number of hours of Paid Sick Leave
equal to the number of hours that the Employee is normally scheduled to
work over two workweeks.
(2) If the part-time Employee lacks a normal weekly schedule under
Sec. 826.21(b)(1), the number of hours of Paid Sick Leave to which the
Employee is entitled is calculated as follows:
(i) If the part-time Employee has been employed for at least six
months, the Employee is entitled to up to the number of hours of Paid
Sick Leave equal to fourteen times the average number of hours that the
Employee was scheduled to work each calendar day over the six-month
period ending on the date on which the Employee takes Paid Sick Leave,
including any hours for which the Employee took leave of any type.
(ii) If the part-time Employee has been employed for fewer than six
months, the Employee is entitled to up to the number of hours of Paid
Sick Leave equal to fourteen times the number of hours the Employee and
the Employer agreed to at the time of hiring that the Employee would
work, on average, each calendar day. If there is no such agreement, the
Employee is entitled to up to the number of hours of Paid Sick Leave
equal to fourteen times the average number of hours per calendar day
that the Employee was scheduled to work over the entire period of
employment, including hours for which the Employee took leave of any
type.
Sec. 826.22 Amount of Pay for Paid Sick Leave.
(a) Subject to Sec. 826.22(c), for each hour of Pick Sick Leave
taken by an Employee for qualifying reasons set forth in sections Sec.
826.20(a)(1) through(3), the Employer shall pay the higher of:
(1) The Employee's average regular rate as computed under Sec.
826.25;
(2) The Federal minimum wage to which the Employee is entitled; or
(3) Any State or local minimum wage to which the Employee is
entitled.
(b) Subject to Sec. 826.22(c), for each hour of Paid Sick Leave
taken by an Employee for qualifying reasons set forth in Sec.
826.20(a)(4) through (6), the Employer shall pay the Employee two-
thirds of the amount described in Sec. 826.24(a).
(c) Limitations on payments:
(1) In no event shall an Employer be required to pay more than $511
per day and $5,110 in the aggregate per Employee when an Employee takes
Paid Sick Leave for qualifying reasons set forth in sections Sec.
826.20(a)(1) through (3).
(2) In no event shall an Employer be required to pay more than $200
per day and $2,000 in the aggregate per Employee when an Employee takes
Paid Sick Leave for qualifying reasons set forth in sections Sec.
826.20(a)(4) through (6).
Sec. 826.23 Amount of Expanded Family and Medical Leave.
(a) An Eligible Employee is entitled to take up to twelve workweeks
of Expanded Family and Medical Leave during the period April 1, 2020
through December 31, 2020.
(b) Any time period of Expanded Family and Medical Leave that an
Eligible Employee takes counts towards the twelve workweeks of FMLA
leave to which the Eligible Employee is entitled for any qualifying
reason in a twelve-month period under Sec. 825.200 of this chapter,
see Sec. 826.70.
(c) Section 2612(d)(2)(A) of the FMLA shall be applied, provided
however, that the Eligible Employee may elect, and the Employer may
require the Eligible Employee, to use only leave that would be
available to the Eligible Employee for the purpose set forth in Sec.
826.20(b) under the Employer's existing policies, such as personal
leave or paid time off. Any leave that an Eligible Employee elects to
use or that an Employer requires the Eligible Employee to use would run
concurrently with Expanded Family and Medical Leave taken under this
section.
Sec. 826.24 Amount of pay for Expanded Family and Medical Leave.
Subject to Sec. 826.60, after the initial two weeks of Expanded
Family and Medical Leave, the Employer shall pay the Eligible Employee
two-thirds of the Eligible Employee's average regular rate, as computed
under Sec. 826.25, times the Eligible Employee's scheduled number of
hours for each day of such leave taken.
(a) In no event shall an Employer be required to pay more than $200
per day and $10,000 in the aggregate per Eligible Employee when an
Eligible Employee takes Expanded Family and Medical Leave for up to ten
weeks after the initial two-week period of unpaid Expanded Family and
Medical Leave.
(b) For the purpose of this section, the ``scheduled number of
hours'' is determined as follows:
(1) If the Eligible Employee has a normal work schedule, the number
of hours the Eligible Employee is normally scheduled to work on that
workday;
(2) If the Eligible Employee has a work schedule that varies to
such an extent that an Employer is unable to determine the number of
hours the Eligible Employee would have worked on the day for which
leave is taken and has been employed for at least six months, the
average number of hours the Eligible Employee was scheduled to work
each workday, over the six-month period ending on the date on which the
Eligible Employee first takes Expanded Family and Medical Leave,
including hours for which the Eligible Employee took leave of any type;
or
(3) If the Eligible Employee has a work schedule that varies to
such an extent that an Employer is unable to determine the number of
hours the Eligible Employee would have worked on the day for which
leave is taken and
[[Page 19351]]
the Eligible Employee has been employed for fewer than six months, the
average number of hours the Eligible Employee and the Employer agreed
at the time of hiring that the Eligible Employee would work each
workday. If there is no such agreement, the scheduled number of hours
is equal to the average number of hours per workday that the Eligible
Employee was scheduled to work over the entire period of employment,
including hours for which the Eligible Employee took leave of any type.
(c) As an alternative, the amount of pay for Expanded Family and
Medical Leave may be computed in hourly increments instead a full day.
For each hour of Expanded Family and Medical Leave taken after the
first two weeks, the Employer shall pay the Eligible Employee two-
thirds of the Eligible Employee's average regular rate, as computed
under Sec. 826.25.
(d) Notwithstanding paragraph (a) of this section, if an Eligible
Employee elects or is required to use leave available to the Eligible
Employee for the purpose set forth in Sec. 826.20(b) under the
Employer's policies, such as vacation or personal leave or paid time
off, concurrently with Expanded Family and Medical Leave, the Employer
must pay the Eligible Employee a full day's pay for that day. However,
the Employer is capped at taking $200 a day or $10,000 in the aggregate
in tax credits for Expanded Family and Medical Leave paid under the
EFMLEA.
Sec. 826.25 Calculating the Regular Rate under the Family First
Coronavirus Response Act.
(a) Average regular rate. The ``average regular rate'' used to
compute pay for Paid Sick Leave and Expanded Family and Medical Leave
is calculated as follows:
(1) Use the methods contained in parts 531 and 778 of this chapter
to compute the regular rate for each full workweek in which the
Employee has been employed over the lesser of:
(i) The six-month period ending on the date on which the Employee
takes Paid Sick Leave or Expanded Family and Medical Leave; or
(ii) The entire period of employment.
(2) Compute the average of the weekly regular rates under paragraph
(a)(1) of this section, weighted by the number of hours worked for each
workweek.
(b) Calculating the regular rate for commissions, tips, and piece
rates. An Employee's commissions, tips, and piece rates are
incorporated into the regular rate for purposes of the FFCRA to the
same extent that they are included in the calculation of the regular
rate under the FLSA, and Sec. 531.60 and part 778 of this chapter.
Sec. 826.30 Employee eligibility for leave.
(a) Eligibility under the EPSLA. All Employees of an Employer are
eligible for Paid Sick Leave under the EPSLA, except as provided in
paragraphs (c) and (d) of this section and in Sec. 826.40(b).
(b) Eligibility under the EFMLEA. All Employees employed by an
Employer for at least thirty calendar days are eligible for Expanded
Family and Medical Leave under the EFMLEA, except as provided in
paragraphs (c) and (d) in this section and in Sec. 826.40(b).
(1) An Employee is considered to have been employed by an Employer
for at least thirty calendar days if:
(i) The Employer had the Employee on its payroll for the thirty
calendar days immediately prior to the day that the Employee's leave
would begin; or
(ii) The Employee was laid off or otherwise terminated by the
Employer on or after March 1, 2020, and rehired or otherwise reemployed
by the Employer on or before December 31, 2020, provided that the
Employee had been on the Employer's payroll for thirty or more of the
sixty calendar days prior to the date the Employee was laid off or
otherwise terminated.
(2) If an Employee employed by a temporary placement agency is
subsequently hired by the Employer, the Employer will count the days
worked as a temporary Employee at the Employer toward the thirty-day
eligibility period.
(3) An Employee who has been employed by a covered Employer for at
least thirty calendar days is eligible for Expanded Family and Medical
Leave under the EFMLEA regardless of whether the Employee would
otherwise be eligible for leave under the FMLA. Thus, for example, an
Employee need not have been employed for 1,250 hours of service and
twelve months of employment as otherwise required under the FMLA, see
Sec. 825.110(a)(1)(2) of this chapter, to be eligible for leave under
the EFMLEA.
(c) Exclusion of Employees who are health care providers and
emergency responders. An Employer whose Employee is a health care
provider or an emergency responder may exclude such Employee from the
EPSLA's Paid Sick Leave requirements and/or the EFMLEA's Expanded
Family and Medical Leave requirements.
(1) Health care provider--
(i) For the purposes of this definition Employees who may be
exempted from Paid Sick Leave or Expanded Family and Medical Leave by
their Employer under the FFCRA, a health care provider is anyone
employed at any doctor's office, hospital, health care center, clinic,
post-secondary educational institution offering health care
instruction, medical school, local health department or agency, nursing
facility, retirement facility, nursing home, home health care provider,
any facility that performs laboratory or medical testing, pharmacy, or
any similar institution, Employer, or entity. This includes any
permanent or temporary institution, facility, location, or site where
medical services are provided that are similar to such institutions.
(ii) This definition includes any individual employed by an entity
that contracts with any of these institutions described above to
provide services or to maintain the operation of the facility where
that individual's services support the operation of the facility. This
also includes anyone employed by any entity that provides medical
services, produces medical products, or is otherwise involved in the
making of COVID-19 related medical equipment, tests, drugs, vaccines,
diagnostic vehicles, or treatments. This also includes any individual
that the highest official of a State or territory, including the
District of Columbia, determines is a health care provider necessary
for that State's or territory's or the District of Columbia's response
to COVID-19.
(iii) Application limited to leave under the EPSLA and the EFMLEA.
The definition of ``health care provider'' contained in this subsection
applies only for the purpose of determining whether an Employer may
elect to exclude an Employee from taking leave under the EPSLA and/or
the EFMLEA, and does not otherwise apply for purposes of the FMLA or
section 5102(A)(2) of the EPSLA.
(2) Emergency responders--
(i) For the purposes of Employees who may be excluded from Paid
Sick Leave or Expanded Family and Medical Leave by their Employer under
the FFCRA, an emergency responder is anyone necessary for the provision
of transport, care, healthcare, comfort and nutrition of such patients,
or others needed for the response to COVID-19. This includes but is not
limited to military or national guard, law enforcement officers,
correctional institution personnel, fire fighters, emergency medical
services personnel, physicians, nurses, public health personnel,
emergency medical technicians, paramedics, emergency management
personnel, 911 operators, child welfare workers and service providers,
public works personnel, and persons with skills or training in
operating specialized equipment or other skills needed to provide aid
in a
[[Page 19352]]
declared emergency, as well as individuals who work for such facilities
employing these individuals and whose work is necessary to maintain the
operation of the facility. This also includes any individual whom the
highest official of a State or territory, including the District of
Columbia, determines is an emergency responder necessary for that
State's or territory's or the District of Columbia's response to COVID-
19.
(ii) [Reserved]
(d) Exclusion by OMB. The Director of the Office of Management and
Budget (OMB) has authority to exclude, for good cause, certain U.S.
Government Employers with respect to certain categories of Executive
Branch Eligible Employees from the requirement to provide paid leave
under the EFMLEA. See CARES Act section 4605.
(e) The Director of the OMB has authority to exclude certain
Employees, for good cause, from the definition of ``Employee'' for
purposes of the EPSLA. See CARES Act section 4605. The categories of
Employees the Director of the OMB has authority to so exclude from
EPSLA are:
(1) Federal officers or Employees covered under Title II of the
FMLA (which is codified in subchapter V of chapter 63 of title 5 of the
United States Code);
(2) Other individuals occupying a position in the civil service (as
that term is defined in 5 U.S.C. 2101(1)); and
(3) Employees of a United States Executive Agency, as defined in 5
U.S.C. 105, including the U.S. Postal Service and U.S. Postal
Regulatory Commission.
Sec. 826.40 Employer coverage.
(a) Private Employers. Any private entity or individual who employs
fewer than 500 Employees must provide Paid Sick Leave and Expanded
Family and Medical Leave, except as provided in paragraph (b) of this
section or in Sec. 826.30(c).
(1) To determine the number of Employees employed, the Employer
must count all full-time and part-time Employees employed within the
United States at the time the Employee would take leave. For purposes
of this count, every part-time Employee is counted as if he or she were
a full-time Employee.
(i) For this purpose, ``within the United States'' means any State
within the United States, the District of Columbia, or any Territory or
possession of the United States.
(ii) The number of Employees includes:
(A) All Employees currently employed, regardless of how long those
Employees have worked for the Employer;
(B) Any Employees on leave of any kind;
(C) Employees of temporary placement agencies who are jointly
employed under the FLSA, see part 791 of this chapter, by the Employer
and another Employer (regardless of which Employer's payroll the
Employee appears on); and
(D) Day laborers supplied by a temporary placement agency
(regardless of whether the Employer is the temporary placement agency
or the client firm).
(iii) The number of Employees does not include workers who are
independent contractors, rather than Employees, under the FLSA. Nor
does the number of Employees include workers who have been laid off or
furloughed and have not subsequently been reemployed.
(2) To determine the number of Employees employed, all common
Employees of joint employers or all Employees of integrated employers
must be counted together.
(i) Typically, a corporation (including its separate establishments
or divisions) is considered a single Employer and all of its Employees
must be counted together.
(ii) Where one corporation has an ownership interest in another
corporation, the two corporations are separate Employers unless they
are joint employers under the FLSA, see part 791 of this chapter, with
respect to certain Employees.
(iii) In general, two or more entities are separate Employers
unless they meet the integrated employer test under the FMLA. See Sec.
825.104(c)(2) of this chapter. If two entities are an integrated
employer under this test, then Employees of all entities making up the
integrated employer must be counted.
(b) Exemption from requirement to provide leave under the EPSLA
Section 5102(a)(5) and the EFMLEA for Employers with fewer than 50
Employees.
(1) An Employer, including a religious or nonprofit organization,
with fewer than 50 Employees (small business) is exempt from providing
Paid Sick Leave under the EPSLA and Expanded Family and Medical Leave
under the EFMLEA when the imposition of such requirements would
jeopardize the viability of the business as a going concern. A small
business under this section is entitled to this exemption if an
authorized officer of the business has determined that:
(i) The leave requested under either section 102(a)(1)(F) of the
FMLA or section 5102(a)(5) of the EPSLA would result in the small
business's expenses and financial obligations exceeding available
business revenues and cause the small business to cease operating at a
minimal capacity;
(ii) The absence of the Employee or Employees requesting leave
under either section 102(a)(1)(F) of the FMLA or section 5102(a)(5) of
the EPSLA would entail a substantial risk to the financial health or
operational capabilities of the business because of their specialized
skills, knowledge of the business, or responsibilities; or
(iii) There are not sufficient workers who are able, willing, and
qualified, and who will be available at the time and place needed, to
perform the labor or services provided by the Employee or Employees
requesting leave under either section 102(a)(1)(F) of the FMLA or
section 5102(a)(5) of the EPSLA, and these labor or services are needed
for the small business to operate at a minimal capacity.
(2) To elect this small business exemption, the Employer must
document that a determination has been made pursuant to the criteria
set forth by the Department in Sec. 826.40(b)(1). The Employer should
not send such documentation to the Department, but rather retain the
records in its files.
(3) Regardless of whether a small Employer chooses to exempt one or
more Employees, the Employer is still required to post a notice
pursuant to Sec. 826.80.
(c) Public Employers. (1) Any public Employer must provide its
Employees Paid Sick Leave except as provided in Sec. 826.30(c) through
(d).
(2) Any public Employer must provide its Eligible Employees
Expanded Family and Medical Leave, except as provided in paragraph
(c)(3) of this section and in Sec. 826.30(c) through (d).
(3) The EFMLEA amended only Title I of the FMLA, resulting in a
divide in coverage as to Employees of the United States and of agencies
of the United States (Federal Employees). Federal Employees covered by
Title I of the FMLA are eligible for Expanded Family and Medical Leave.
But most Federal Employees are instead covered under Title II of the
FMLA, which was not amended by the EFMLEA. Such Federal Employees are
not within the EFMLEA's purview and are therefore not eligible for
Expanded Family and Medical Leave. The Federal Employees covered by
Title I of the FMLA are therefore eligible for Expanded Family and
Medical Leave, subject to the limitations and exceptions set forth in
Sec. 826.30(b) through (d), including:
[[Page 19353]]
(i) Employees of the U.S. Postal Service;
(ii) Employees of the U.S. Postal Regulatory Commission;
(iii) Part-time Employees who do not have an established regular
tour of duty during the administrative workweek;
(iv) Employees serving under an intermittent appointment or
temporary appointment with a time limitation of one year or less;
(v) Employees of the Government Accountability Office;
(vi) Employees of the Library of Congress; and
(vii) Other Federal Employees not covered by Title II of the FMLA.
Sec. 826.50 Intermittent leave.
(a) General Rule. Subject to the conditions and applicable limits,
an Employee may take Paid Sick Leave or Expanded Family and Medical
Leave intermittently (i.e., in separate periods of time, rather than
one continuous period) only if the Employer and Employee agree. The
Employer and Employee may memorialize in writing any agreement under
this section, but a clear and mutual understanding between the parties
is sufficient.
(b) Reporting to Worksite. The ability of an Employee to take Paid
Sick Leave or Expanded Family and Medical Leave intermittently while
reporting to an Employer's worksite depends upon the reason for the
leave.
(1) If the Employer and Employee agree, an Employee may take up to
the entire portion of Paid Sick Leave or Expanded Family and Medical
Leave intermittently to care for the Employee's Son or Daughter whose
School or Place of Care is closed, or Child Care Provider is
unavailable, because of reasons related to COVID-19. Under such
circumstances, intermittent Paid Sick Leave or paid Expanded Family and
Medical Leave may be taken in any increment of time agreed to by the
Employer and Employee.
(2) An Employee may not take Paid Sick Leave intermittently if the
leave is taken for any of the reasons specified in Sec.
826.20(a)(1)(i) through (iv) and (vi). Once the Employee begins taking
Paid Sick Leave for one or more of such reasons, the Employee must use
the permitted days of leave consecutively until the Employee no longer
has a qualifying reason to take Paid Sick Leave.
(c) Teleworking. If an Employer directs or allows an Employee to
Telework, or the Employee normally works from home, the Employer and
Employee may agree that the Employee may take Paid Sick Leave for any
qualifying reason or Expanded Family and Medical Leave intermittently,
and in any agreed increment of time (but only when the Employee is
unavailable to Telework because of a COVID-19 related reason).
(d) Calculation of Leave. If an Employee takes Paid Sick Leave or
Expanded Family and Medical Leave intermittently as the Employee and
Employer have agreed, only the amount of leave actually taken may be
counted toward the Employee's leave entitlements. For example, an
Employee who normally works forty hours in a workweek only takes three
hours of leave each work day (for a weekly total of fifteen hours) has
only taken fifteen hours of the Employee's Paid Sick Leave or 37.5% of
a workweek of the Employee's Expanded Family and Medical Leave.
Sec. 826.60 Leave to care for a Child due to School or Place of Care
Closure or Child Care unavailability--intersection between the EPSLA
and the EFMLEA.
(a) An Eligible Employee who needs leave to care for his or her Son
or Daughter whose School or Place of Care is closed, or whose Child
Care Provider is unavailable, due to COVID-19 related reasons may be
eligible to take leave under both the EPSLA and the EFMLEA. If so, the
benefits provided by the EPSLA run concurrently with those provided
under the EFMLEA.
(1) Intersection between the EPSLA and the EFMLEA. An Eligible
Employee may take up to twelve weeks of Expanded Family and Medical
Leave to care for his or her Son or Daughter whose School or Place of
Care has been closed, or whose Child Care Provider is unavailable, due
to COVID-19 related reasons.
(2) The first two weeks of leave (up to 80 hours) may be paid under
the EPSLA; the subsequent weeks are paid under the EFMLEA.
(3) An Employee's prior use of Paid Sick Leave under EPSLA will
impact the amount of Paid Sick Leave that remains available to the
Employee.
(4) An Eligible Employee who has exhausted his or her twelve
workweek FMLA entitlement, see Sec. 826.70, is not precluded from
taking Paid Sick Leave.
(b) Supplementing Expanded Family and Medical Leave with other
accrued Employer-provided leave.
(1) Where an Eligible Employee takes Expanded Family and Medical
Leave after taking all or part of his or her Paid Sick Leave for a
reason other than that provided in Sec. 826.20(a)(1)(v), all or part
of the Eligible Employee's first ten days (or first two weeks) of
Expanded Family and Medical Leave may be unpaid because the Eligible
Employee will have exhausted his or her Paid Sick Leave entitlement.
(2) Under the circumstances in (b)(1) of this section, the Eligible
Employee may choose to substitute earned or accrued paid leave provided
by the Employer during this period. The term substitute means that the
preexisting paid leave provided by the Employer, which has been earned
or accrued pursuant to established policies of the Employer, will run
concurrently with the unpaid Expanded Family and Medical Leave.
Accordingly, the Eligible Employee receives pay pursuant to the
Employer's preexisting paid leave policy during the period of otherwise
unpaid Expanded Family and Medical Leave.
(3) If the Eligible Employee does not elect to substitute paid
leave for unpaid Expanded Family and Medical Leave under the above
conditions and circumstances, the Eligible Employee will remain
entitled to any paid leave that the Eligible Employee has earned or
accrued under the terms of his or her Employer's plan.
Sec. 826.70 Leave to care for a Child due to School or Place of Care
closure or Child Care unavailability--intersection of the EFMLEA and
the FMLA.
(a) Certain employees are entitled to a total of twelve workweeks
of FMLA leave in the twelve-month period defined in Sec. 825.200(b) of
this chapter for the following reasons:
(1) The birth of the employee's son or daughter, and to care for
the newborn child;
(2) The placement with the employee of a son or daughter for
adoption or foster care, and to care for the newly placed child;
(3) To care for the employee's spouse, son, daughter, or parent
with a serious health condition;
(4) Because of a serious health condition that makes the employee
unable to perform one or more of the essential functions of his or her
job;
(5) Because of any qualifying exigency arising out of the fact that
the employee's spouse, son, daughter, or parent is a military member on
covered active duty status (or has been notified of an impending call
or order to covered active duty); and
(6) To care for the Eligible Employee's Son or Daughter whose
School or Place of Care is closed, or Child Care Provider is
unavailable, due to COVID-19 related reasons.
(b) If an Eligible Employee has already taken some FMLA leave for
reasons (a)(1) through (5) during the twelve-month period, the Eligible
Employee may take up to the remaining portion of
[[Page 19354]]
the twelve workweek leave for Expanded Family and Medical Leave. If an
Eligible Employee has already taken the full twelve workweeks of FMLA
leave during the twelve-month period, the Eligible Employee may not
take Expanded Family and Medical Leave. An Eligible Employee's
entitlement to take up to two weeks of Paid Sick Leave under the EPSLA
is not impacted by the Eligible Employee's use of FMLA leave. For
example, if an Eligible Employee used his or her full FMLA leave
entitlement for birth and bonding with a newborn, he or she would still
be entitled to take Paid Sick Leave (for any covered reason), but could
not take Expanded Family and Medical Leave in the same twelve-month
period if his or her child's day care closed due to COVID-19 related
reasons.
(c) If an Eligible Employee takes fewer than twelve weeks of
Expanded Family and Medical Leave, the Employee may take up to the
remaining portion of the twelve weeks FMLA leave entitlement for
reasons described in paragraphs (a)(1) through (5) of this section. For
example, if an Eligible Employee takes eight weeks of Expanded Family
and Medical Leave to care for his or her Son or Daughter whose School
is closed due to COVID-19 related reasons, he or she could take up to
four workweeks of unpaid FMLA leave for his or her own serious health
condition later in the twelve-month period.
(d) If an employee has taken FMLA leave to care for a covered
service member with a serious injury or illness, the remaining FMLA
leave entitlement that may be used for Expanded Family and Medical
Leave is calculated in accordance with Sec. 825.127(e) of this
chapter.
(e) An Eligible Employee can take a maximum of twelve workweeks of
Expanded Family and Medical Leave during the period in which the leave
may be taken (April 2, 2020 to December 31, 2020) even if that period
spans two FMLA leave twelve-month periods. For example, if an
Employer's twelve-month period begins on July 1, and an Eligible
Employee took seven weeks of Expanded Family and Medical Leave in May
and June, 2020, the Eligible Employee could only take up to five
additional weeks of Expanded Family and Medical Leave between July 1
and December 31, 2020, even though the first seven weeks of Expanded
Family and Medical Leave fell in the prior twelve-month period.
(f) The first two weeks of Expanded Family and Medical Leave may be
unpaid and the Eligible Employee may substitute Paid Sick Leave under
the EPSLA at two-thirds the Employee's regular rate of pay or accrued
paid leave provided by the Employer during this period (see Sec.
826.60). After the first two weeks of leave, Expanded Family and
Medical Leave is paid at two-thirds the Eligible Employee's regular
rate of pay, up to $200 per day per Eligible Employee. Because this
period of Expanded Family and Medical Leave is not unpaid, the FMLA
provision for substitution of the Employee's accrued paid leave is
inapplicable, and neither the Eligible Employee nor the Employer may
require the substitution of paid leave. However, Employers and Eligible
Employees may agree, where Federal or state law permits, to have paid
leave supplement pay under the EFMLEA so that the Employee receives the
full amount of his or her normal pay. For example, an Eligible Employee
and Employer may agree to supplement the Expanded Family and Medical
Leave by substituting one-third hour of accrued vacation leave for each
hour of Expanded Family and Medical Leave. If the Eligible Employee and
Employer do not agree to supplement paid leave in the manner described
above, the Employee will remain entitled to all the paid leave which is
earned or accrued under the terms of the Employer's plan for later use.
This option is not available to Federal agencies if such partial leave
payment would be contrary to a governing statute or regulation.
Sec. 826.80 Employer notice.
(a) Every Employer covered by FFCRA's paid leave provisions is
required to post and keep posted on its premises, in conspicuous places
a notice explaining the FFCRA's paid leave provisions and providing
information concerning the procedures for filing complaints of
violations of the FFCRA with the Wage and Hour Division.
(b) An Employer may satisfy this requirement by emailing or direct
mailing this notice to Employees, or posting this notice on an Employee
information internal or external website.
(c) To meet the requirements of paragraph (a) of this section,
Employers may duplicate the text of the Department's model notice (WHD
1422 REV 03/20) or may use another format so long as the information
provided includes, at a minimum, all of the information contained in
that notice. Prototypes are available at www.dol.gov/whd. Employers
furnishing notices to sensory-impaired individuals must also comply
with all applicable requirements under Federal or State law.
(d) This section does not require translation or provision of the
notice in languages other than English.
(e) For Employers who are covered by the EFMLEA but are not covered
by the other provisions of the FMLA, posting of this FFCRA notice
satisfies their FMLA general notice obligation. See 29 U.S.C. 2619;
Sec. 825.300 of this chapter.
Sec. 826.90 Employee notice of need for leave.
(a) Requirement to provide notice. (1) An Employer may require an
Employee to follow reasonable notice procedures after the first workday
(or portion thereof) for which an Employee takes Paid Sick Leave for
any reason other than that described in Sec. 826.20(a)(1)(v). Whether
a procedure is reasonable will be determined under the facts and
circumstances of each particular case. Nothing in this section
precludes an Employee from offering notice to an Employer sooner; the
Department encourages, but does not require, Employees to notify
Employers about their request for Paid Sick Leave or Expanded Family
and Medical Leave as soon as practicable. If an Employee fails to give
proper notice, the Employer should give him or her notice of the
failure and an opportunity to provide the required documentation prior
to denying the request for leave.
(2) In any case where an Employee requests leave in order to care
for the Employee's Son or Daughter whose School or Place of Care is
closed, or Child Care Provider is unavailable, due to COVID-19 related
reasons, if that leave was foreseeable, an Employee shall provide the
Employer with notice of such Paid Sick Leave or Expanded Family and
Medical Leave as soon as practicable. If an Employee fails to give
proper notice, the Employer should give him or her notice of the
failure and an opportunity to provide the required documentation prior
to denying the request for leave.
(b) Timing and delivery of notice. Notice may not be required in
advance, and may only be required after the first workday (or portion
thereof) for which an Employee takes Paid Sick Leave or Expanded Family
and Medical Leave. After the first workday, it will be reasonable for
an Employer to require notice as soon as practicable under the facts
and circumstances of the particular case. Generally, it will be
reasonable for notice to be given by the Employee's spokesperson (e.g.,
spouse, adult family member, or other responsible party) if the
Employee is unable to do so personally.
(c) Content of notice. Generally, it will be reasonable for an
Employer to require oral notice and sufficient information for an
Employer to determine whether the requested leave is covered by the
[[Page 19355]]
EPSLA or the EFMLEA. An Employer may not require the notice to include
documentation beyond what is allowed by Sec. 826.100.
(d) Complying with Employer policy. Generally, it will be
reasonable for the Employer to require the Employee to comply with the
Employer's usual and customary notice and procedural requirements for
requesting leave, absent unusual circumstances.
Sec. 826.100 Documentation of need for leave.
(a) An Employee is required to provide the Employer documentation
containing the following information prior to taking Paid Sick Leave
under the EPSLA or Expanded Family and Medical Leave under the EFMLEA:
(1) Employee's name;
(2) Date(s) for which leave is requested;
(3) Qualifying reason for the leave; and
(4) Oral or written statement that the Employee is unable to work
because of the qualified reason for leave.
(b) To take Paid Sick Leave for a qualifying COVID-19 related
reason under Sec. 826.20(a)(1)(i), an Employee must additionally
provide the Employer with the name of the government entity that issued
the Quarantine or Isolation Order.
(c) To take Paid Sick Leave for a qualifying COVID-19 related
reason under Sec. 826.20(a)(1)(ii) an Employee must additionally
provide the Employer with the name of the health care provider who
advised the Employee to self-quarantine due to concerns related to
COVID-19.
(d) To take Paid Sick Leave for a qualifying COVID-19 related
reason under Sec. 826.20(a)(1)(iii) an Employee must additionally
provide the Employer with either:
(1) The name of the government entity that issued the Quarantine or
Isolation Order to which the individual being care for is subject; or
(2) The name of the health care provider who advised the individual
being cared for to self-quarantine due to concerns related to COVID-19.
(e) To take Paid Sick Leave for a qualifying COVID-19 related
reason under Sec. 826.20(a)(1)(v) or Expanded Family and Medical
Leave, an Employee must additionally provide:
(1) The name of the Son or Daughter being cared for;
(2) The name of the School, Place of Care, or Child Care Provider
that has closed or become unavailable; and
(3) A representation that no other suitable person will be caring
for the Son or Daughter during the period for which the Employee takes
Paid Sick Leave or Expanded Family and Medical Leave.
(f) The Employer may also request an Employee to provide such
additional material as needed for the Employer to support a request for
tax credits pursuant to the FFCRA. The Employer is not required to
provide leave if materials sufficient to support the applicable tax
credit have not been provided. For more information, please consult
https://www.irs.gov/newsroom/covid-19-related-tax-credits-for-required-paid-leave-provided-by-small-and-midsize-businesses-faqs.
Sec. 826.110 Health care coverage.
(a) While an Employee is taking Paid Sick Leave or Expanded Family
and Medical Leave, an Employer must maintain the Employee's coverage
under any group health plan (as defined in the Internal Revenue Code of
1986 at 26 U.S.C. 5000(b)(1)) on the same conditions as coverage would
have been provided if the Employee had been continuously employed
during the entire leave period. All Employers covered by the EPSLA or
the EFMLEA are subject to the requirement to maintain health coverage.
The term ``group health plan'' has the same meaning as under the FMLA
(see Sec. 825.102 of this chapter). Maintenance of individual health
insurance policies purchased by an Employee from an insurance provider,
as described in Sec. 825.209(a) of this chapter, is the responsibility
of the Employee.
(b) The same group health plan benefits provided to an Employee
prior to taking Paid Sick Leave or Expanded Family and Medical Leave
must be maintained while an Employee is taking Paid Sick Leave or
Expanded Family and Medical Leave. For example, if family member
coverage is provided to an Employee, family member coverage must be
maintained while an Employee is taking Paid Sick Leave or Expanded
Family and Medical Leave. Similarly, benefit coverage for medical care,
surgical care, hospital care, dental care, eye care, mental health
counseling, substance abuse treatment, etc., must be maintained while
an Employee is taking Paid Sick Leave or Expanded Family and Medical
Leave if provided in an Employer's group health plan, including a
supplement to a group health plan, whether or not provided through a
flexible spending account or other component of a cafeteria plan.
(c) If an Employer provides a new health plan or benefits or
changes health benefits or plans while an Employee is taking Paid Sick
Leave or Expanded Family and Medical Leave, the Employee is entitled to
the new or changed plan/benefits to the same extent as if the Employee
was not on leave. Any other plan changes (e.g., in coverage, premiums,
deductibles, etc.) which apply to all Employees of the workforce would
also apply to Employees taking Paid Sick Leave or Expanded Family and
Medical Leave.
(d) Notice of any opportunity to change plans or benefits must also
be given to an Employee taking Paid Sick Leave or Expanded Family and
Medical Leave. If the Employee requests the changed coverage, the
Employer must provide it.
(e) An Employee remains responsible for paying his or her portion
of group health plan premiums which had been paid by the Employee prior
to taking Paid Sick Leave or Expanded Family and Medical Leave. If
premiums are raised or lowered, the Employee would be required to pay
the new Employee premium contribution on the same terms as other
Employees. The Employee's share of premiums must be paid by the method
normally used during any paid leave, presumably as a payroll deduction.
If leave is unpaid, or the Employee's pay during leave is insufficient
to cover the Employee's share of the premiums, the Employer may obtain
payment from the Employee in accordance with Sec. 825.210(c) of this
chapter.
(f) An Employee may choose not to retain group health plan coverage
while an Employee is taking Paid Sick Leave or Expanded Family and
Medical Leave. However, when an Employee returns from leave, the
Employee is entitled to be reinstated on the same terms as prior to
taking the leave, including family or dependent coverages, without any
additional qualifying period, physical examination, exclusion of pre-
existing conditions, etc.
(g) Except as required by the Consolidated Omnibus Budget
Reconciliation Act of 1986 (COBRA), an Employer's obligation to
maintain health benefits while an Employee is taking Paid Sick Leave or
Expanded Family and Medical Leave ceases under this section if and when
the employment relationship would have terminated if the Employee had
not taken Paid Sick Leave or Expanded Family and Medical Leave (e.g.,
if the Employee fails to return from leave, or if the entitlement to
leave ceases because an Employer closes its business).
Sec. 826.120 Multiemployer plans.
(a) Paid Sick Leave. In accordance with its existing collective
bargaining obligations, an Employer signatory to a
[[Page 19356]]
multiemployer collective bargaining agreement may satisfy its
obligations to provide Paid Sick Leave by making contributions to a
multiemployer fund, plan, or other program. Such contributions must be
based on the hours of Paid Sick Leave to which each Employee is
entitled under the EPSLA according to each Employee's work under the
multi-employer collective bargaining agreement.
(b) Expanded Family and Medical Leave. In accordance with its
existing collective bargaining obligations, an Employer signatory to a
multiemployer collective bargaining agreement may satisfy its
obligations to provide Expanded Family and Medical Leave by making
contributions to a multiemployer fund, plan, or other program. Such
contributions must be based on the hours of paid family and medical
leave to which each Eligible Employee is entitled under the EFMLEA,
according to each Eligible Employee's work under the multiemployer
collective bargaining agreement.
(c) Employee access. Any multiemployer fund, plan, or program under
section (a) or (b) of this section must enable or otherwise allow
Employees to secure payments for Paid Sick Leave or Expanded Family and
Medical Leave. If the multiemployer fund, plan, or program does not
enable or otherwise allow Employees to secure payments for paid leave
to which they are entitled under the FFCRA based on their work under
the multiemployer collective bargaining agreement, the multiemployer
fund, plan, or program does not satisfy the requirements of the FFCRA.
(d) Alternative means of compliance. In accordance with its
existing collective bargaining obligations, an Employer signatory to a
multiemployer collective bargaining agreement may satisfy its
obligations to provide Paid Sick Leave under the EPSLA or Expanded
Family and Medical Leave under the EFMLEA by means other than those set
forth in paragraph (a) and (b) of this section, provided such means are
consistent with its existing bargaining obligations and any applicable
collective bargaining agreement.
Sec. 826.130 Return to work.
(a) General rule. On return from Paid Sick Leave or Expanded Family
and Medical Leave, an Employee has a right to be restored to the same
or an equivalent position in accordance with Sec. Sec. 825.214 and
825.215 of this chapter.
(b) Restoration limitations. Notwithstanding paragraph (a) of this
section:
(1) An Employee is not protected from employment actions, such as
layoffs, that would have affected the Employee regardless of whether he
or she took leave. In order to deny restoration to employment, an
Employer must be able to show that an Employee would not otherwise have
been employed at the time reinstatement is requested in order to deny
restoration to employment.
(2) For leave taken under the EFMLEA, an Employer may deny job
restoration to key Eligible Employees, as defined under the FMLA (Sec.
825.217 of this chapter), if such denial is necessary to prevent
substantial and grievous economic injury to the operations of the
Employer.
(3) An Employer who employs fewer than twenty-five Eligible
Employees may deny job restoration to an Eligible Employee who has
taken Expanded Family and Medical Leave if all four of the following
conditions exist:
(i) The Eligible Employee took leave to care for his or her Son or
Daughter whose School or Place of Care was closed, or whose Child Care
Provider was unavailable, for COVID-19 related reasons;
(ii) The position held by the Eligible Employee when the leave
commenced does not exist due to economic conditions or other changes in
operating conditions of the Employer that affect employment and are
caused by a Public Health Emergency during the period of leave;
(iii) The Employer makes reasonable efforts to restore the Eligible
Employee to a position equivalent to the position the Eligible Employee
held when the leave commenced, with equivalent employment benefits,
pay, and other terms and conditions of employment; and
(iv) Where the reasonable efforts of the Employer to restore the
Eligible Employee to an equivalent position fail, the Employer makes
reasonable efforts to contact the Eligible Employee during a one-year
period, if an equivalent position becomes available. The one-year
period begins on the earlier of the date the leave related to a Public
Health Emergency concludes or the date twelve weeks after the Eligible
Employee's leave began.
Sec. 826.140 Recordkeeping.
(a) An Employer is required to retain all documentation provided
pursuant to Sec. 826.100 for four years, regardless whether leave was
granted or denied. If an Employee provided oral statements to support
his or her request for Paid Sick Leave or Expanded Family and Medical
Leave, the Employer is required to document and maintain such
information in its records for four years.
(b) An Employer that denies an Employee's request for Paid Sick
Leave or Expanded Family and Medical Leave pursuant to Sec. 826.40(b)
shall document the determination by its authorized officer that it is
eligible for such exemption and retain such documentation for four
years.
(c) In order to claim tax credits from the Internal Revenue Service
(IRS), an Employer is advised to maintain the following records for
four years:
(1) Documentation to show how the Employer determined the amount of
paid sick leave and expanded family and medical leave paid to Employees
that are eligible for the credit, including records of work, Telework
and Paid Sick Leave and Expanded Family and Medical Leave;
(2) Documentation to show how the Employer determined the amount of
qualified health plan expenses that the Employer allocated to wages;
(3) Copies of any completed IRS Forms 7200 that the Employer
submitted to the IRS;
(4) Copies of the completed IRS Forms 941 that the Employer
submitted to the IRS or, for Employers that use third party payers to
meet their employment tax obligations, records of information provided
to the third party payer regarding the Employer's entitlement to the
credit claimed on IRS Form 941, and
(5) Other documents needed to support its request for tax credits
pursuant to IRS applicable forms, instructions, and information for the
procedures that must be followed to claim a tax credit. For more
information, please consult https://www.irs.gov/newsroom/covid-19-related-tax-credits-for-required-paid-leave-provided-by-small-and-midsize-businesses-faqs.
Sec. 826.150 Prohibited acts and enforcement under the EPSLA.
(a) Prohibited acts. An Employer is prohibited from discharging,
disciplining, or discriminating against any Employee because such
Employee took Paid Sick Leave under the EPSLA. Likewise, an Employer is
prohibited from discharging, disciplining, or discriminating against
any Employee because such Employee has filed any complaint or
instituted or caused to be instituted any proceeding, including an
enforcement proceeding, under or related to the EPSLA, or has testified
or is about to testify in any such proceeding.
(b) Enforcement. (1) Failure to provide Paid Sick Leave. An
Employer who fails to provide its Employee Paid Sick Leave under the
EPSLA is considered to have
[[Page 19357]]
failed to pay the minimum wage as required by section 6 of the FLSA, 29
U.S.C. 206, and shall be subject to the enforcement provisions set
forth in sections 16 and 17 of the FLSA, 29 U.S.C. 216, 217.
(2) Discharge, discipline, or discrimination. An Employer who
discharges, disciplines, or discriminates against an Employee in the
manner described in subsection (a) is considered to have violated
section 15(a)(3) of the FLSA, 29 U.S.C. 215(a)(3), and shall be subject
to the enforcement provisions relevant to such violations set forth in
sections 16 and 17 of the FLSA, 29 U.S.C. 216, 217.
Sec. 826.151 Prohibited acts and enforcement under the EFMLEA.
(a) Prohibited acts. The prohibitions against interference with the
exercise of rights, discrimination, and interference with proceedings
or inquiries described in the FMLA, 29 U.S.C. 2615, apply to Employers
with respect to Eligible Employees taking, or attempting to take, leave
under the EFMLEA.
(b) Enforcement. An Employer who commits a prohibited act described
in paragraph (a) of this section shall be subject to the enforcement
provisions set forth in section 107 of the FMLA, 29 U.S.C. 2617, and
Sec. 825.400 of this chapter, except that an Eligible Employee may
file a private action to enforce the EFMLEA only if the Employer is
otherwise subject to the FMLA in the absence of EFMLEA.
Sec. 826.152 Filing a complaint with the Federal Government.
A complaint alleging any violation of the EPSLA and/or the EFMLEA
may be filed in person, by mail, or by telephone, with the Wage and
Hour Division, U.S. Department of Labor, including at any local office
of the Wage and Hour Division. No particular form of complaint is
required, except that a complaint must be in writing and should include
a full statement of the acts and/or omissions, with pertinent dates,
that are believed to constitute the violation.
Sec. 826.153 Investigative authority of the Secretary.
(a) Investigative authority under the EPSLA. For purposes of the
EPSLA, the Secretary has the investigative authority and subpoena
authority set forth in sections 9 and 11 of the FLSA, 29 U.S.C. 209,
211.
(b) Investigative authority under the EFMLEA. For purposes of
EFMLEA, the Secretary has the investigative authority set forth in
section 106(a) of the FMLA, 29 U.S.C. 2616(a), and the subpoena
authority set forth in section 106(d) of the FMLA, 29 U.S.C. 2616(d).
Sec. 826.160 Effect on other laws, employer practices, and collective
bargaining agreements.
(a) No diminishment of other rights or benefits. (1) An Employee's
entitlement to, or actual use of, Paid Sick Leave under the EPSLA is in
addition to--and shall not in any way diminish, reduce, or eliminate--
any other right or benefit, including regarding Paid Sick Leave, to
which the Employee is entitled under any of the following:
(i) Another Federal, State, or local law, except the FMLA as
provided in Sec. 826.70;
(ii) A collective bargaining agreement; or
(iii) An Employer policy that existed prior to April 1, 2020.
(2) That an Employee already used any type of leave prior to April
1, 2020, for reasons related to COVID-19 or otherwise, shall not be
grounds for his or her Employer to deny him or her Paid Sick Leave and
Expanded Family and Medical Leave or for the Employer to delay or
postpone the Employee's use of Paid Sick Leave and Expanded Family and
Medical Leave. The foregoing is subject to the exception of FMLA leave
as provided in Sec. 826.70. An Employer shall permit an Employee to
immediately use the Paid Sick Leave and Expanded Family and Medical
Leave to which he or she is entitled under the EPSLA and the EFMLEA.
However, no Employer is obligated or required to provide, and no
Employee has a right or entitlement to receive, any retroactive
reimbursement or financial compensation through Paid Sick Leave or
Expanded Family and Medical Leave for any unpaid or partially paid
leave taken prior to April 1, 2020, even if such leave was taken for
COVID-19-reated reasons.
(b) Sequencing of Paid Sick Leave. (1) An Employee may first use
Paid Sick Leave before using any other leave to which he or she is
entitled by any:
(i) Other Federal, State, or local law;
(ii) Collective bargaining agreement; or
(iii) Employer policy that existed prior to April 1, 2020.
(2) No Employer may require, coerce, or unduly influence any
Employee to first use any other paid leave to which the Employee is
entitled before the Employee uses Paid Sick Leave. Nor may an Employer
require, coerce, or unduly influence an Employee to use any source or
type of unpaid leave prior to taking Paid Sick Leave.
(c) Sequencing of Expanded Family and Medical Leave. (1) Consistent
with section 102(d)(2)(B) of the FMLA, 29 U.S.C. 2612(d)(2)(B), an
Eligible Employee may elect to use, or an Employer may require that an
Eligible Employee use, provided or accrued leave available to the
Eligible Employee for the purpose set forth in Sec. 826.20(b) under
the Employer's policies, such as vacation or personal leave or paid
time off, concurrently with Expanded Family and Medical Leave.
(2) If an Eligible Employee elects, or an Employer requires,
concurrent leave, the Employer must pay the Eligible Employee the full
amount to which the Eligible Employee is entitled under the Employer's
preexisting paid leave policy for the period of leave taken.
(d) No creation of requirements upon end of employment. An Employer
has no obligation to provide--and an Employee or former Employee has no
right or entitlement to receive--financial compensation or other
reimbursement for unused Paid Sick Leave or Expanded Family and Medical
Leave upon the Employee's termination, resignation, retirement, or any
other separation from employment.
(e) No creation of requirements upon expiration. An Employer has no
obligation to provide--and an Employee or former Employee has no right
or entitlement to receive--financial compensation or other
reimbursement for unused Paid Sick Leave or Expanded Family and Medical
Leave upon the expiration of the FFCRA on December 31, 2020.
(f) One time use. Any person is limited to a total of 80 hours Paid
Sick Leave. An Employee who has taken all such leave and then changes
Employers is not entitled to additional Paid Sick Leave from his or her
new Employer. An Employee who has taken some, but fewer than 80 hours
of Paid Sick Leave, and then changes Employers is entitled only to the
remaining portion of such leave from his or her new Employer and only
if his or her new Employer is covered by the Emergency Paid Sick Leave
Act. Such an Employee's Paid Sick Leave would expire upon reaching 80
hours of Paid Sick Leave total, regardless of the Employer providing
it, or when the Employee reaches the number of hours of Paid Sick Leave
to which he or she is entitled based on a part-time schedule with the
new Employer.
[FR Doc. 2020-07237 Filed 4-2-20; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 4510-27-P