California Expands Family and Medical Leave Entitlements


**This is an updated version of our September 2, 2020 post.** 

A new California statute will significantly expand current family and medical leave laws, by expanding the obligation to provide job-protected leave to small businesses with as few as five employees, allowing leave to be taken for additional reasons, and eliminating certain exceptions to employer obligations to provide leave.

Current Law

Under the California Family Rights Act (“CFRA”), companies with 50 or more employees within a 75-mile radius are required to provide 12 workweeks of unpaid protected leave during a 12-month period to employees who have worked 1,250 hours during the previous year, if needed due to the employee’s own serious health condition, to bond with a new child, or to care for a qualifying family member with a serious health condition.  Application of the CFRA only to companies with 50 or more employees within a 75-mile radius aligns with requirements under the federal Family and Medical Leave Act (“FMLA”).

In 2018, California passed the New Parent Leave Act, which expanded the obligation to provide 12 workweeks of unpaid protected leave to bond with a new child to companies with as few as 20 employees within a 75-mile radius.

S.B. 1383

S.B. 1383, which was recently signed by Governor Newsom, is set to expand the current law in a number of key ways.

First, the law expands which companies are required to provide job-protected family and medical leaves.

Additionally, S.B. 1383 expands the reasons for which employees may take protected leave under the CFRA.

S.B. 1383 also eliminates two existing CFRA exemptions.

Certain portions of the CFRA will remain unchanged under S.B. 1383.  Employees must still have been employed for at least 12 months, and have worked at least 1,250 hours during the previous 12 months, in order to be eligible for leave.  Additionally, CFRA leave may still run concurrently with FMLA leave, if the leave is eligible for FMLA protection, except for leave taken under the FMLA for disability on account of pregnancy, childbirth, or related medical conditions.  Employee obligations to provide notice and supporting documentation also remain in place.

Prior to S.B. 1383’s effective date, smaller companies will need to draft CFRA leave policies and institute leave procedures, and they will need to approve, administer and track employee leaves once the law becomes effective.  Larger companies will also need to update their CFRA policies and forms, as employees will be able to take leave for additional reasons, and existing exceptions will no longer apply.

S.B. 1383 becomes effective on January 1, 2021.


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National Law Review, Volume X, Number 267