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29 CFR 825.207 - Is FMLA leave paid or unpaid?
(a) Generally, FMLA leave is unpaid. However, under
the circumstances described in this section, FMLA permits
an eligible employee to choose to substitute paid leave
for FMLA leave. If an employee does not choose to substitute
accrued paid leave, the employer may require the employee
to substitute accrued paid leave for FMLA leave.
(b) Where an employee has earned or accrued paid vacation,
personal or family leave, that paid leave may be substituted
for all or part of any (otherwise) unpaid FMLA leave
relating to birth, placement of a child for adoption
or foster care, or care for a spouse, child or parent
who has a serious health condition. The term ``family
leave'' as used in FMLA refers to paid leave provided
by the employer covering the particular circumstances
for which the employee seeks leave for either the birth
of a child and to care for such child, placement of
a child for adoption or foster care, or care for a spouse,
child or parent with a serious health condition. For
example, if the employer's leave plan allows use of
family leave to care for a child but not for a parent,
the employer is not required to allow accrued family
leave to be substituted for FMLA leave used to care
for a parent.
(c) Substitution of paid accrued vacation, personal,
or medical/sick leave may be made for any (otherwise)
unpaid FMLA leave needed to care for a family member
or the employee's own serious health condition. Substitution
of paid sick/medical leave may be elected to the extent
the circumstances meet the employer's usual requirements
for the use of sick/medical leave. An employer is not
required to allow substitution of paid sick or medical
leave for unpaid FMLA leave ``in any situation'' where
the employer's uniform policy would not normally allow
such paid leave. An employee, therefore, has a right
to substitute paid medical/ sick leave to care for a
seriously ill family member only if the employer's leave
plan allows paid leave to be used for that purpose.
Similarly, an employee does not have a right to substitute
paid medical/ sick leave for a serious health condition
which is not covered by the employer's leave plan.
(d)(1) Disability leave for the birth of a child would
be considered FMLA leave for a serious health condition
and counted in the 12 weeks of leave permitted under
FMLA. Because the leave pursuant to a temporary disability
benefit plan is not unpaid, the provision for substitution
of paid leave is inapplicable. However, the employer
may designate the leave as FMLA leave and count the
leave as running concurrently for purposes of both the
benefit plan and the FMLA leave entitlement. If the
requirements to qualify for payments pursuant to the
employer's temporary disability plan are more stringent
than those of FMLA, the employee must meet the more
stringent requirements of the plan, or may choose not
to meet the requirements of the plan and instead receive
no payments from the plan and use unpaid FMLA leave
or substitute available accrued paid leave.
(2) The Act provides that a serious health condition
may result from injury to the employee ``on or off''
the job. If the employer designates the leave as FMLA
leave in accordance with Sec. 825.208, the employee's
FMLA 12-week leave entitlement may run concurrently
with a workers' compensation absence when the injury
is one that meets the criteria for a serious health
condition. As the workers' compensation absence is not
unpaid leave, the provision for substitution of the
employee's accrued paid leave is not applicable. However,
if the health care provider treating the employee for
the workers' compensation injury certifies the employee
is able to return to a ``light duty job'' but is unable
to return to the same or equivalent job, the employee
may decline the employer's offer of a ``light duty job''.
As a result the employee may lose workers' compensation
payments, but is entitled to remain on unpaid FMLA leave
until the 12-week entitlement is exhausted. As of the
date workers' compensation benefits cease, the substitution
provision becomes applicable and either the employee
may elect or the employer may require the use of accrued
paid leave. See also Secs. 825.210(f), 825.216(d), 825.220(d),
825.307(a)(1) and 825.702(d) (1) and (2) regarding the
relationship between workers' compensation absences
and FMLA leave.
(e) Paid vacation or personal leave, including leave
earned or accrued under plans allowing ``paid time off,''
may be substituted, at either the employee's or the
employer's option, for any qualified FMLA leave. No
limitations may be placed by the employer on substitution
of paid vacation or personal leave for these purposes.
(f) If neither the employee nor the employer elects
to substitute paid leave for unpaid FMLA leave under
the above conditions and circumstances, the employee
will remain entitled to all the paid leave which is
earned or accrued under the terms of the employer's
plan.
(g) If an employee uses paid leave under circumstances
which do not qualify as FMLA leave, the leave will not
count against the 12 weeks of FMLA leave to which the
employee is entitled. For example, paid sick leave used
for a medical condition which is not a serious health
condition does not count against the 12 weeks of FMLA
leave entitlement.
(h) When an employee or employer elects to substitute
paid leave (of any type) for unpaid FMLA leave under
circumstances permitted by these regulations, and the
employer's procedural requirements for taking that kind
of leave are less stringent than the requirements of
FMLA (e.g., notice or certification requirements), only
the less stringent requirements may be imposed. An employee
who complies with an employer's less stringent leave
plan requirements in such cases may not have leave for
an FMLA purpose delayed or denied on the grounds that
the employee has not complied with stricter requirements
of FMLA. However, where accrued paid vacation or personal
leave is substituted for unpaid FMLA leave for a serious
health condition, an employee may be required to comply
with any less stringent medical certification requirements
of the employer's sick leave program. See Secs. 825.302(g),
825.305(e) and 825.306(c).
(i) Section 7(o) of the Fair Labor Standards Act (FLSA)
permits public employers under prescribed circumstances
to substitute compensatory time off accrued at one and
one-half hours for each overtime hour worked in lieu
of paying cash to an employee when the employee works
overtime hours as prescribed by the Act. There are limits
to the amounts of hours of compensatory time an employee
may accumulate depending upon whether the employee works
in fire protection or law enforcement (480 hours) or
elsewhere for a public agency (240 hours). Compensatory
time off is not a form of accrued paid leave that an
employer may require the employee to substitute for
unpaid FMLA leave. The employee may request to use his/her
balance of compensatory time for an FMLA reason. If
the employer permits the accrual to be used in compliance
with regulations, 29 CFR 553.25, the absence which is
paid from the employee's accrued compensatory time ``account''
may not be counted against the employee's FMLA leave
entitlement. [60 FR 2237, Jan. 6, 1995; 60 FR 16383,
Mar. 30, 1995]
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