5404: Family, Medical, and Maternity Leave
- 5000: Personnel
Adoption Date: Nov. 20, 2012
Last Revised: Nov. 4, 2021
I. State Paid Family and Medical Leave
Paid family and medical leave are benefits administered by the Washington State Employment Security Department. Employees interested in applying for these benefits must follow the process described in Chapter 192-610 WAC. Employees who have questions regarding the application process may contact the Employment Security Department or visit its website at paidleave.wa.gov.
The district will post notices made available by the Employment Security Department that provide pertinent information regarding paid family and medical leave benefits. A brief description of the paid family and medical leave benefits program is provided below. The description is not meant to capture every aspect of the program; rather, it is meant to give a general overview. For more information, contact Human Resources.
Eligibility
Employees who have worked 820 hours during the first four of the last five completed calendar quarters or the last four completed calendar quarters are eligible for paid family and medical leave.
Reasons for leave
Family leave means leave taken by an employee from work for the following reasons:
A. To participate in providing care, including physical or psychological care, for a family member made necessary by a serious health condition of the family member.
B. To bond with the employee’s child during the first 12 months after the child’s birth, or the first 12 months after the placement of a child under the age of eighteen with the employee; or
C. Because of any qualifying exigency as permitted under the federal Family and Medical Leave Act for family members as defined by RCW 50A.05.010(10).
Medical leave means any leave taken by an employee from work made necessary by the employee’s own serious health condition as defined by RCW 50A.05.010(20).
Amount of leave
Employees may take up to 12 weeks of paid family leave during a period of 52 consecutive calendar weeks.
Employees may take up to 12 weeks of paid medical leave during a period of 52 consecutive calendar weeks. Paid medical leave may be extended by two weeks if the employee experiences a serious health condition with a pregnancy that results in incapacity.
Employees may take a combined 16 weeks of paid family and paid medical leave during a period of 52 consecutive calendar weeks. The combined total may be extended to 18 weeks if the employee experiences a serious health condition with a pregnancy that results in incapacity.
Employee notice to district
An employee must provide the district at least 30 days written notice before paid family or medical leave is to begin if the need for the leave is foreseeable based on an expected birth, placement of a child, or planned medical treatment for a serious health condition.
An employee must provide the district written notice as soon as practicable when 30 days’ notice is not possible because of a lack of knowledge of approximately when leave will be required to begin, because of a change in circumstances, or because of a medical emergency.
An employee must provide the district written notice as soon as is practicable for foreseeable leave due to a qualifying military exigency, regardless of how far in advance such leave is foreseeable.
The notice must be in writing and contain at least the anticipated timing and duration of the leave.
District notice to employee
Whenever the district becomes aware that an employee is absent from work for more than seven consecutive days to take family or medical leave, the district will provide the employee with a written statement provided by the Employment Security Department of the employee’s rights.
The notice will be sent by the fifth business day after the employee’s seventh consecutive missed day of work due to family or medical leave or by the fifth business day after the employer becomes aware that the employee’s absence is due to family or medical leave, whichever is later.
Employment restoration
Upon return from paid family or medical leave, an employee is entitled to be restored to the position of employment held by the employee when the leave commenced or to be restored to an equivalent position with equivalent employment benefits, pay, and other terms and conditions of employment. As a condition of restoration for employees who have taken medical leave, the district may require those employees to receive certification from their health care provider that they are able to resume work. The district may deny restoration to any salaried employee who is among the highest paid ten percent of its employees if the following apply:
A. Denial is necessary to prevent substantial and grievous economic injury to the operations of the employer.
B. The district notifies the employee of its intent to deny restoration on such basis at the time the district determines the injury would occur; and
C. The leave has commenced and the employee elects not to return to employment after receiving the notice.
The district may also deny restoration if the employee would not otherwise have been employed at the time of reinstatement.
If the district chooses to deny restoration, it will provide written notice of such denial in person or by certified mail. The notice will include a statement that the district intends to deny employment restoration when the leave has ended, the reasons behind the decision to deny restoration, an explanation that health benefits will still be paid for the duration of the leave, and the date on which eligibility for employer-provided health benefits ends.
The rights described above only apply in the following circumstances: the district has 50 or more employees; the employee has been employed by the district for twelve months or more; and the employee has worked for the district for at least 1,250 hours during the 12 months immediately preceding the date on which leave will commence.
II. Federal Family and Medical Leave
General Provisions
Every employee of the district who has worked for the district at least one year and for at least 1,250 hours in the preceding year is entitled to twelve (12) work weeks of family leave during any twelve (12) month period to do the following:
A. Care for a newborn child, an adopted child of the employee who is under the age of eighteen at the time of placement for adoption, or a newly placed foster child.
B. Care for a spouse, parent or child of the employee who has a serious health condition, or the employee may obtain leave for their own serious health condition if it renders the employee unable to perform their job; or
C. Respond to a qualifying exigency occurring because the employee’s spouse, son or daughter, or parent is on active duty or has been notified of pending active duty in support of a contingency operation.
Family leave authorized under this policy should be taken full-time and consecutively unless an alternative schedule is approved by the superintendent or designee or where intermittent or reduced leave is medically necessary. Instructional staff may not take reduced or intermittent leave when it would constitute 20 percent of the number of working days in the period during which the leave would extend without the approval of the superintendent or designee. An instructional employee may be transferred to an alternative equivalent position that would accommodate reduced or intermittent leave, if such a position is available.
A period of family leave is in addition to any sick leave taken due to the employee’s temporary disability attributable to pregnancy or childbirth.
The superintendent or designee may require written verification from the employee’s health care provider when the employee is taking medical leave based on their own serious health condition. The district may obtain the opinion of a second health care provider, at district expense, concerning any information pertinent to the employee’s leave request. If the opinions of the health care providers differ on any matter determinative of the employee’s eligibility for family leave, the two health care providers will select a third provider, whose opinion, obtained at the employer’s expense, will be conclusive.
Birth or Adoption
Leave taken for newborn or adopted childcare will be completed within one year after the date of birth or placement for adoption.
Leave will be granted to all eligible employees upon the birth or adoption of the employee’s child. Leave will be granted upon the same terms to employees who become adoptive parents or stepparents, at the time of birth or initial placement for adoption of a child under the age of six, as is available to employees who become biological parents. Such leave is available only when the child lives in the employee’s household at the time of birth or initial placement.
Employee requests for leave of absence due to birth or initial placement for adoption of a child will be submitted in writing to the superintendent or designee not less than 30 days prior to the anticipated beginning date of the leave. The notice will include the approximate beginning and ending dates for the leave requested.
If both parents of a newborn or newly adopted child are employed by the school district, they will be entitled to a total of twelve workweeks of family leave during any twelve month period, and leave will be granted to only one parent at a time. There is no pooling effect for spouses if the family leave is related to a serious health condition.
Employment Restoration
Any employee returning from an authorized family leave will be entitled to the same position held by the employee when the leave commenced, or to a position with equivalent benefits and pay. An employee may be denied restoration under the following circumstances:
A. The specific job is eliminated by a bona fide restructuring, or a reduction-in-force resulting from lack of funds or lack of work,
B. An employee on family leave takes a position with another employer outside the home, or
C. The employee fails to provide the required notice of intent to take family leave or fails to return on the established ending date of leave,
D. Or as otherwise allowed by law. If an employee fails to return from family leave, the district may recover the costs of the employee’s health benefits paid during the leave.
Instructional staff may be required to delay their return from family leave to the beginning of the next semester under the following circumstances:
A. The employee began leave five or more weeks before the end of the semester, the leave is for more than three weeks, and the employee would otherwise return to work within three weeks of the end of the semester.
B. The employee began family leave (except for a personal health condition) less than five weeks before the end of the semester, the leave is for more than two weeks, and the employee would otherwise return to work within two weeks of the end of the semester.
C. The employee began family leave (except for a personal health condition) three or fewer weeks before the end of the semester and the period of leave is more than five working days.
III. Maternity Leave
A staff member may use accumulated, paid sick leave for the period of actual disability attributable to pregnancy or childbirth. This period will extend from the date of birth for a period of not more than 60 days, unless an actual period of disability which begins prior to the date of birth continues beyond 60 days is otherwise verified in writing by the employee’s physician or licensed practitioner.
If the employee’s accumulated sick leave is exhausted during the period of maternity, the district will grant a leave of absence without pay or benefits, upon the staff member’s request, for the remainder of the period of actual documented disability due to pregnancy or childbirth.
Notice
A pregnant staff member is requested to notify their immediate supervisor and the superintendent or designee by the beginning of the fifth month of pregnancy.
At the time of such notice the staff member will submit a written request to their immediate supervisor and the superintendent or designee for one or more of the following:
A. Maternity leave for the period of their actual disability due to pregnancy or childbirth.
B. Family leave for a period of up to 12 weeks, in addition to any period of maternity disability leave, the district will extend the employee’s health benefit during this period of unpaid leave.
C. Leave of absence for a period of up to the beginning of the next school term or school year. Such extended leave of absence may be approved at the discretion of the superintendent or designee based upon consideration of educational program needs and the desires of the staff member, together with the recommendation of their personal physician or licensed practitioner; or
D. Termination of employment by resignation.
The notice to the district will include the approximate beginning and ending dates for the leave.
Employment Conditions
A pregnant employee may continue working as long as they can perform their normal duties, with reasonable accommodations.
The employee may return to work when physically able to perform their duties with reasonable accommodations. If an employee intends to return to work sooner than the agreed upon period of leave, or after a period that includes medical leave, they must provide a note from their health care provider that the staff member is in good health and ready to resume their duties with reasonable accommodations.
No later than 30 days after the date of birth, the employee is requested to notify the superintendent or designee of the specific date when they will return to work. Unless the superintendent or designee approves an earlier date of return, the employee will give at least 14 days advance notice of the actual date of return.
The staff member will return to their duties following an extended leave of absence on the date approved by the superintendent or designee. If the employee is still experiencing a disability due to pregnancy, miscarriage, abortion, childbirth, or recovery which prevents the employee from performing their duties on the scheduled date of return, an additional period of unpaid leave of absence may be approved at the discretion of the superintendent or designee based upon consideration of educational program needs and the recommendation of the employee’s personal physician or licensed practitioner.
Assignment upon Return
An employee who has taken a leave of absence only for the actual period of disability relating to pregnancy or childbirth or up to twelve weeks of family leave will return to the same assignment, or a similar position for which they are qualified with at least the same pay and benefits, as they held prior to the maternity leave or family leave.
Upon return from an extended maternity leave, a staff member will be entitled to a position in the district subject to the availability of a position for which they are qualified. An effort will be made to place the staff member in their original position or in a comparable position.
Emergency Provisions
Unusual or extraordinary circumstances may exist regarding leave requests. In such cases, Human Resources will notify the affected employee(s) and will make every effort to mitigate the situation with the employees in accordance with each employees’ bargaining agreement if applicable.
Cross Reference:
Board Policy 5021 Applicability of Personnel Policies
Legal References:
RCW 28A.400.300 Hiring and discharging of employees — Written leave policies — Seniority and leave benefits of employees transferring between school districts and other educational employers
Chapter 49.78 RCW Family Leave
WAC 162-30-020 Pregnancy, childbirth, and pregnancy related conditions
29 USC Sec 2601 Family and Medical Leave Act of 1993