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The Act will not supersede a Collective
Bargaining Agreement.
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To qualify for the FMLA you must work for
a covered employer. A covered employer is an employer
that has 50 or more total employees. In
the case of a municipality, all municipal employees are
counted for the purposes of qualifying under the FMLA.
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You must have worked for more than 1250
hours. That includes actual time, overtime, on call time-
measured from when the FMLA request was made, not
including sick time, vacation time, jury duty, personal
day, military leave, and compensatory time.
You are eligible for 12 weeks of unpaid
leave during the year for the following reasons:
For the birth of a child or a difficult
pregnancy
For the adoption of a child or for foster
care
Care for an employees spouse, child,
stepchild, foster child, adopted child or biological
parent with a serious medical condition. In-laws are not
included
Your own serious health condition
Leave must be approved by
your employer, and they may require that you take paid leave first-
exhausting your vacation and/of personal days, then reverting to
unpaid leave. Compensatory time cannot be used, sick time can not be
used for taking care of another but can be used for your own illness.
At the employees or
employer's option, certain kinds of paid leave may be substituted for
unpaid leave.
Maintenance of Medical Benefits
Maintenance of medical benefits must
remain on the same terms as if the employee was still
working. Employee must return to work and the end of the
twelve week period or be responsible for the premium that
the employer paid, unless illness is so severe that the
employee cannot return to work.
Job Restoration Rights
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You must get your job back when you come
back to work.
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Regarding seniority, an employee is not
entitled to accrue time.
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FMLA time does not count against an
employee toward retirement time.
Employer Obligations
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The employer must post a FMLA policy
conspicuously where it can be read by employees.
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The employer must provide written
guidelines on the FMLA Law.
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The employer must provide their employees
with written documentation of what the employees
obligations are.
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The employer is obligated to invoke FMLA.
Employee Obligations
Unlawful Acts by Employers
The FMLA makes it unlawful for any employer to:
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Interfere with, restrain,
or deny the exercise of any right provided under FMLA
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To discharge or discriminate against any
person for opposing any practice made unlawful by FMLA or
for involvement in any proceeding under for relating to
FMLA
If you are a Nassau Police
Conference member and have any questions concerning this law
feel free to contact Pat
Hall, President Bill Diebold, or your attorney. For those of
you reading this page who think your employment qualifies for
FMLA but does not abide by the above outline, we urge you to
contact your local Department of Labor.
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