Code of Colorado Regulations
1100 - Department of Labor and Employment
1107 - Division of Family and Medical Leave Insurance
7 CCR 1107-2 - REGULATIONS CONCERNING LOCAL GOVERNMENT PARTICIPATION WITH THE PAID FAMILY MEDICAL LEAVE PROGRAM
Section 7 CCR 1107-2.3 - Process and Notification of Program Declination
Universal Citation: 7 CO Code Regs 1107-2 ยง 3
Current through Register Vol. 47, No. 17, September 10, 2024
1. Local government employers are permitted to decline participation in the family and medical leave insurance program after a written notice has been delivered to the Division memorializing the decision by an affirmative vote of the local government's governing body to decline participation in the program. Such a vote must follow the local government's procedures for other votes of the governing body for similar decisions.
A. If a
local government participates in the family and medical leave program on or
after January 1, 2024, and later votes to decline participation, the
declination will not take effect until at least 180 days after the vote, to
allow individual employees the opportunity to opt into the benefits program
pursuant to C.R.S. §
8-13.3-514, should individuals
choose to elect coverage.
B. Public
notice must be given in the same manner as any similar business before the
governing body, and the local government must take/hear public comment prior to
the vote if the local government has established procedures for public comment
for similar business. The local government's employees must also be notified in
writing prior to the vote and provided both information regarding the vote
process and the opportunity to submit comments through a public process to the
governing body.
C. Within 30 days
following a local government declination vote, the local government must
provide its local government employees with a written individual notice of the
local government's declination vote and the impact toward coverage under the
FAMLI Act, or other paid family and leave insurance coverage. The written
notice, must at a minimum, explain the differences between benefits offered by
the state program and any other paid leave plan offered by the local
government. The notice must also state which employees, if any, are eligible
for job protection under the federal Family and Medical Leave Act (FMLA)
benefits or other local provisions where applicable. The notice must also be
delivered to all new employees hired after the date of the declination
vote.
D. The written notice
described at Section 2.3.1.C must contain information regarding the right of
local government employees to voluntarily elect coverage pursuant to C.R.S.
§
8-13.3-514, and the contact
information for the Division. In addition to providing written notices to
individual employees in accordance with Section 2.3.1.C of this rule, local
government employers must also post a notice containing the information in a
conspicuous and accessible place in each establishment where employees are
employed; provided, however, in cases where the local government employer does
not maintain a physical workplace, or an employee teleworks or performs work
through a web-based or app-based platform, notification must be sent via
electronic communication or through a conspicuous posting in the web-based or
app-based platform. The individual and posted notices required in Sections
2.3.1.C and 2.3.1.D must be in English and in any language representing the
first language spoken by at least five percent of the local government
employer's workforce. The Division will create and make available to local
government employers posters and notices containing the information required in
this regulation, and local government employers may use the posters and notices
to comply with the requirements of this section.
1. It is the responsibility of the local
government employer to request printed materials from the Division. Local
government employers may be responsible for the printing and mailing costs of
such materials.
2. It is the
responsibility of the local government to provide written notification to the
Division of the local government employers interpretation needs of printed
notices for languages other than English or Spanish.
2. Local governments without employees are not employers, and as such, do not need to register, vote, decline coverage, or otherwise participate in the family and medical leave insurance program.
Disclaimer: These regulations may not be the most recent version. Colorado may have more current or accurate information. We make no warranties or guarantees about the accuracy, completeness, or adequacy of the information contained on this site or the information linked to on the state site. Please check official sources.
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