미국에서 본인이나 가족이 아플경우, 회사에서 자리를 보장하며, 똑같은 Medical Benefit를 받으며 일정기간동안 직장일을 하지 않을 수 있는 권리입니다. 자세한 사항은 Employment Law page로 가셔서 살펴보시기 바랍니다.
Full title | An Act To grant family and temporary medical leave under certain circumstances. |
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Acronym | FMLA |
Enacted by the | 103rd United States Congress |
Citations | |
Public Law | Pub.L. 103-3 |
Stat. | 107 Stat. 6 |
Codification | |
Legislative history | |
| |
Major amendments | |
Supreme Court cases | |
The Family and Medical Leave Act of 1993 (FMLA) is a United States federal law requiring covered employers to provide employees job-protected unpaid leave for qualified medical and family reasons. These reasons include personal or family illness, military service, family military leave, pregnancy, adoption, or the foster care placement of a child.[1] The FMLA is administered by the Wage and Hour Division of the United States Department of Labor.
The bill was a major part of President Bill Clinton's agenda in his first term. President Clinton signed the bill into law on February 5, 1993 (Pub.L. 103-3; 29 U.S.C. sec. 2601; 29 CFR 825) and it took effect on August 5, 1993, six months later.
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The FMLA requires larger employers to provide unpaid leave to certain workers in the United States. The law recognizes the growing needs of balancing family, work, and obligations, and promises numerous protections to workers.
Prior to the passage of the FMLA, the provision of leave for family or medical reasons was left to the discretion of individual employers. Employees making a request for leave could be denied for any reason, and employees could be fired for taking family and medical leave. When workers changed jobs, even within the same company, they could not be sure that their requests for leave would be treated consistently: "[S]ome employers had formal leave policies that were applied uniformly to their workforces while others had informal policies and the granting of leave depended on the particular circumstances."[2]
In 2007, the Department of Labor estimated that of the 141.7 million workers in the United States, 94.4 million worked at FMLA-covered worksites, and 76.1 million were eligible for FMLA leave. Between 8 percent and 17.1 percent of covered and eligible workers (or between 6.1 million and 13.0 million workers) took FMLA leave in 2005.[3] The 2008 National Survey of Employers found no statistically significant difference between the proportion of small employers (79%) and large employers (82%) that offer full FMLA coverage.[4]
To qualify for the FMLA mandate, a worker must be employed by a business with 50 or more employees within a 75-mile radius of his or her worksite, or a public agency, including schools and state, local, and federal employers (the 50-employee threshold does not apply to public agency employees and local educational agencies). He or she must also have worked for that employer for at least 12 months (not necessarily consecutive) and 1,250 hours within the last 12 months.
The FMLA mandates unpaid, job-protected leave for up to 12 weeks a year:
The FMLA further requires employers to provide for eligible workers:
The federal FMLA does not apply to:
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3 | FLSA (Fair Labor Standards Act) | HR Consultant | 2012.03.02 | 907 |
2 | FSA (Flexible Spending Account) | HR Consultant | 2012.02.19 | 1017 |
» | FMLA - Family and Medical Leave Act of 1993 | HR Consultant | 2012.01.15 | 976 |