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States Impose Paid Family Leave as Congress Weighs National Policy

SHRM urges employers to share their concerns with state and federal lawmakers


A man and woman are holding a baby on a couch.


Twenty-five years ago, the Family and Medical Leave Act (FMLA) was passed, requiring large organizations to offer workers up to 12 weeks of unpaid leave to care for a new baby or sick family member. Today, U.S. employers face a growing patchwork of state paid-leave laws, while momentum is building for federal paid-family-leave legislation.

Employers should ensure that state and federal lawmakers hear their opinions about proposed legislation, urged Lisa Horn, vice president for congressional affairs at the Society for Human Resource Management (SHRM), and Adrienne Schweer, leader of the Paid Family Leave Task Force at the Bipartisan Policy Center, a Washington, D.C., think tank. They spoke March 19 at the 2019 SHRM Employment Law & Legislative Conference in Washington, D.C.

"Paid leave and flexible work options help attract and maintain an engaged, productive workforce," Horn said, "but a fragmented patchwork of state and local leave requirements creates a compliance conundrum, [and] rigid government mandates stifle employer flexibility and innovation."

A 2016 study by the Pew Research Center found that Americans largely support paid leave for new mothers and fathers, as well as for workers who need to care for a family member with a serious health condition or deal with their own medical issues. But the public is sharply divided over whether the government should require employers to offer this benefit or let employers decide for themselves, Horn noted.

According to SHRM's 2018 Employee Benefits survey of more than 3,500 HR professionals, 27 percent of organizations offer paid family leave of some kind. Most employers doing so are outside the states that have imposed paid leave, she said. Employers offer these benefits because they recognize that paid leave is a top concern among Millennials, who are raising families and caring for aging relatives and who will represent more than 75 percent of the workforce within the next decade.

State Mandates Vary

Currently, five states mandate paid family leave. California and Rhode Island fund their programs through an employee payroll tax, while New Jersey, New York and Washington impose payroll taxes on employees and employers. Wage replacement rates among the states range from 50 percent to 90 percent, while the length of family leave varies from four to 12 weeks (with longer periods for medical disability).

Washington, D.C., enacted but hasn't yet implemented a paid-leave law, with the details still being worked out by the City Council.

These initiatives, however, only hint at what's coming, Horn and Schweer said. In 2018, 21 states were considering paid-family-leave laws, and in 2019 even more are expected to consider legislation, they pointed out.

Multistate Employers Face Challenges

In an earlier conference session, Jonathan A. Segal, a partner at Philadelphia-based law firm Duane Morris, highlighted the challenge faced by multistate employers dealing with different state family-leave mandates. An HR professional in Segal's session noted that his company is on the Oregon/Washington border, "with employees on both sides of the river." Washington has a paid FMLA law, but Oregon doesn't, and the company wasn't sure what to do.

When operating in states with different leave requirements, Segal said, employers can choose to follow the most generous paid-leave policy nationwide or have different paid-leave benefits based on location. If they choose the latter option, "it's often bad for employee relations" when employees learn that their access to paid leave is less than co-workers' in other states, he said. While there are also administrative and legal issues in overseeing different policies in different states, "your employee relations issues may be bigger than your legal issues," he noted.

A uniform national policy on paid family leave could resolve many of the challenges now faced by multijurisdictional employers, Segal said.


A National Interest

Momentum is building for a federal paid-leave initiative, Schweer said, but a deep partisan divide will likely prevent legislation from being passed by the current Congress, where Democrats hold the House and Republicans control the Senate. But paid-family-leave proposals could become an issue in the 2020 presidential and congressional campaigns.

Some of the measures that have been introduced or may be reintroduced in Congress include:

  • The New Parents Act, which allows new parents to draw from Social Security for paid leave that lasts one, two or three months in exchange for delaying or reducing future Social Security benefits. Parents also could choose to keep working full-time or part-time and use the extra funds to pay for childcare expenses. Similarly, the Child Rearing and Development Leave Empowerment (CRADLE) Act would let parents receive up to three months of paid leave by giving them the option to postpone Social Security benefits, but would require parents to take leave from work in order to receive the benefit. Neither measure has Democratic co-sponsors.
  • The Family and Medical Insurance Leave (FAMILY) Act, which provides partial wage replacement for all FMLA qualifying events funded by a payroll tax on employers and employees. With 179 Democratic co-sponsors to date and no Republican support, the measure "is expected to pass the House but then to have little chance in the Republican Senate," Horn said. If Democrats take both the House and Senate as well as the presidency in 2020, however, enactment of this or a similar measure would be likely.

In addition, presidential advisor Ivanka Trump has made paid family leave a top priority. The administration's fiscal year 2020 budget includes a proposal to establish a federal state-parental-leave benefit program that would provide six weeks of benefits for mothers, fathers and adoptive parents, funded within the unemployment insurance program. Legislation has not yet been introduced, and the measure isn't expected to attract Democratic support, Schweer said.

A 2018 survey of 1,700 adults by the Cato Institute, a libertarian think tank, found that 74 percent of respondents support a new federal government program to provide 12 weeks of paid leave to new parents or to people dealing with their own or a family member's serious medical condition. Support slips, however, after costs are considered, Horn and Schweer noted. While 54 percent would be willing to pay $200 a year in new taxes to fund a 12-week federal paid-leave program, most oppose establishing a federal paid-leave program if it would cost them $450 a year or more.

[SHRM members-only toolkit: Managing Family and Medical Leave]

Shaping Policy

With state activity picking up speed and the growing potential for passing federal legislation—if not now, then after the 2020 elections—"the HR community needs to be in the discussion to help guide good policy," Horn said.

Both Democrats and Republicans "agree that we need a federal policy on parental leave. Family care is a tough issue" for working parents and those with caregiving responsibilities, Schweer said. "We understand why employees want it and why it makes sense," but the approach and the details—whether the employee, employer or government pays; what share of their salary employees receive; and how much time off employees should get—are points of contention.

Nevertheless, "the Republican Senate is talking about it for the first time, and the Democratic House is moving forward with legislation," Schweer said. Particularly at the state level, the employer community "isn't always at the table" when legislation is taking form, she observed, but by engaging in advocacy with lawmakers and becoming part of conversation, "you can help shape policy so it makes sense for your employees and your companies."

Added Horn, "We're all advocates for paid family leave if we can get the policy right so that it works for both employers and employees."

[Visit SHRM's resource page on paid time off.]

Related SHRM Articles:

GOP Rolls Out ‘New Parents Act’ to Provide Paid Family Leave, SHRM Online, March 2019

State Legislators Say They Want to Hear from HR on Paid Family Leave, SHRM Online, March 2019

Support for New Parents Can Keep Employees On Board, SHRM Online, March 2019

How Much Parental Leave Is Too Much?, SHRM Online, February 2019

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