As parents and students navigate an unprecedented back-to-school season, the U.S. Department of Labor’s Wage and Hour Division recently addressed eligibility questions surrounding paid leave under the Families First Coronavirus Response Act (FFCRA) to care for children who may not be attending classes in person due to the pandemic. The Wage and Hour Division in late August 2020 released Frequently Asked Questions for workers and employers that explain – among other things – when workers qualify for paid time off to accommodate the varied formats and schedules schools are following as they reopen.
The FFCRA’s paid leave provisions apply to leave taken through the end of 2020. Generally speaking, the new guidance stipulates that workers qualify for FFCRA-provided paid time off only when schools are closed or disallow students’ entry. In the FAQs, questions number 98, 99 and 100 – listed below – address specific situations:
Yes, you are eligible to take paid leave under the FFCRA on days when your child is not permitted to attend school in person and must instead engage in remote learning, as long as you need the leave to actually care for your child during that time and only if no other suitable person is available to do so. For purposes of the FFCRA and its implementing regulations, the school is effectively “closed” to your child on days that he or she cannot attend in person. You may take paid leave under the FFCRA on each of your child’s remote-learning days.
No, you are not eligible to take paid leave under the FFCRA because your child’s school is not “closed” due to COVID-19-related reasons; it is open for your child to attend. FFCRA leave is not available to take care of a child whose school is open for in-person attendance. If your child is home not because his or her school is closed, but because you have chosen for the child to remain home, you are not entitled to FFCRA paid leave. However, if, because of COVID-19, your child is under a quarantine order or has been advised by a health care provider to self-isolate or self-quarantine, you may be eligible to take paid leave to care for him or her. See FAQ question 63.
Also, as explained more fully in FAQ question 98 (above), if your child’s school is operating on an alternate day (or other hybrid-attendance) basis, you may be eligible to take paid leave under the FFCRA on each of your child’s remote-learning days because the school is effectively “closed” to your child on those days.
Yes, you are eligible to take paid leave under the FFCRA while your child’s school remains closed. If your child's school reopens, the availability of paid leave under the FFCRA will depend on the particulars of the school’s operations.
Providing Non-FFCRA Leave and Flexibility
Although employees aren’t entitled to FFCRA leave if their child’s school is technically open and they choose remote learning, we encourage employers to work with employees who have chosen to keep kids home (as in Question 99), working out a flexible or reduced schedule as needed. If an employee has chosen to have their children attend school online only, it is likely because they feel the school is not safe or the risk of the child bringing the virus home and infecting a more vulnerable person is too high. If required to choose between working and keeping their family safe, many parents will choose safety, thus leaving their employer with a position to fill. Given the cost of replacing an employee (generally from 20 to 200 percent of their yearly salary), working out a flexible or reduced schedule with employees in this situation is likely the best choice for the company’s bottom line as well as its reputation.