December 16, 2024
2024 Wrapped
By Brooke Thomson President & CEO That’s a wrap for 2024. The holidays bring to a close a…
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Question
After attending the May AIM HR Roundtable roundtable and listening to the Department of Family and Medical Leave (DFML) director discuss the Paid Family and Medical Leave (PFML) law in detail, I still have some questions about the job protection, anti-retaliation section of the law. Could you review those provisions?
Answer
As DFML Director Bill Alpine mentioned at the May Roundtable much of this section of the law is yet to be reviewed in court, leaving employers to interpret the regulations to minimize legal risks. Much of the information used to answer this question comes from the DFML regulation 458 CMR 2.16.
Section 2.16 addresses job protection, retaliation, presumption and legal remedies. While some of the regulations are similar to the federal Family Medical Leave Act (FMLA), some aspects of the Massachusetts regulations impose different obligations on employers.
Job Protection
The job-protection section provides that if an employee takes leave under this law and returns to work within the approved leave period, the employee shall be restored to her or his previous position or to an equivalent position with the same status, pay, employment benefits, length-of-service credit and seniority as of the date of leave.
Once the employee returns to work, the decision to take leave will not adversely affect an employee’s previously held right to accrue vacation time, sick leave, bonuses, advancement, seniority, length-of-service credit or other employment benefits, plans or programs.
Leave periods need not be treated as credited service for purposes of benefit accrual, vesting and eligibility to participate.
The employee is entitled to continue employer-provided health-care benefits similar to any other active employee. The employee portion of employment-related health-insurance benefits shall be remitted by the employee in accordance with the employer’s uniformly applied policies or practices. Employers should notify the employee upfront about the procedure for submitting health insurance contributions.
There are several circumstances in which reinstatement is not required:
Retaliation
It is illegal for any employer to threaten to retaliate or to retaliate by discharging, firing, suspending, expelling, disciplining, threatening or in any other manner discriminating against
It is also illegal for an employer to retaliate as described above against an employee who has:
However, an employer may:
An employee on intermittent leave:
Presumption
Retaliation will be presumed when there is a negative change in the seniority, status, employment benefits, pay or other terms or conditions of employment of an employee:
An employer may rebut the presumption of retaliation only by presenting clear and convincing evidence that the employer’s action was not retaliatory and that the employer had:
An employer’s application of a pre-existing employment rule or policy will be deemed to be clear and convincing evidence. To counter the presumption of retaliation, it is important to have clear policies that are communicated to employees and uniformly enforced.
The law presumes it is not retaliation if an employer, in good faith, notifies the DFML of a situation where it believes an individual is seeking benefits fraudulently.
Civil Actions
An employee or former employee has up to three years to bring a civil lawsuit in Superior Court enforcing actions in the statute, including a claim for retaliation.
AIM members may discuss this or any other human resources issue by calling the Employer Hotline at 800-470-6277.