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Eligible employees have the right to take leave under the federal Family and Medical Leave Act for covered health and caretaking duties. (For more information on employee eligibility for leave, see Who Is Eligible for FMLA Leave?) Both employers and employees have notice obligations under the FMLA. Employers must inform employees of their rights under the FMLA, using four different notice forms. Employees must inform employers of their need to use FMLA leave. The deadlines for employee notice depend on why the employee needs leave.
Employers must give employees a series of notices about their rights under the FMLA and their obligations when using leave. The regulations that interpret the FMLA divide these notice requirements into four separate documents:
You can find notice forms at the Department of Labor's FMLA page. For detailed instructions on completing and providing the forms, deadlines, and more, pick up a copy of The Essential Guide to Family and Medical Leave.
The FMLA requires employees to give notice of their need to take FMLA leave. Generally, employees need not refer specifically to the FMLA or to their legal right to take leave. However, they must provide sufficient information to let your company know that the FMLA may apply (for example, that an employee needs time off after a baby is born or to care for a seriously ill parent). It's up to your company to recognize the possibility that an employee's request for leave may be protected by the FMLA and to ask for more information, if necessary, to determine whether the law applies.
If the employee has already taken FMLA leave and requests more time off for the same reason, then the employee must specifically refer either to the FMLA or to the qualifying reason for leave. This rule recognizes that employees who have already used the FMLA and know their situation qualifies for FMLA leave can be expected to know the rules and provide more extensive notice.
Employees must give notice at least 30 days in advance if their need for FMLA leave is foreseeable (for example, for non-emergency surgery). An employee who does not give 30 days' notice must explain why such notice was not practicable, if the employer requests.
Employees who need leave for an unforeseeable reason must give as much notice as is practicable, usually the same or next business day after the employee learns of the need for leave.
FMLA leave is unpaid. An employee who wants to substitute paid leave available under a company policy for unpaid FMLA leave must meet all of the notice and other procedural requirements of company policy. For example, if your company requires two weeks' advance notice for vacation requests, an employee must give notice two weeks in advance to substitute vacation time for FMLA leave, even if the employee needs FMLA leave for an emergency that wasn't foreseeable two weeks in advance. The employee is still entitled to FMLA leave for that time, but can be prohibited from substituting paid leave until the two-week notice period has passed.