Paid Family Leave is coming to New York!

Paid Family Leave
Paid Family Leave
Paid Family Leave

General Information:

What is Paid Family Leave? 

  • New York State has adopted the richest Paid Family Leave in the United States effective January 2018. Employees will be eligible for paid time off to care for a new child or sick family member.

How does it differ from FMLA?

  • FMLA, the Family and Medical Leave Act, is an unpaid federal program that provides job security during an employee’s approved family/medical-related leave for up to 12 weeks. FMLA only applies to employers with 50+ employees.

  •  FMLA does not provide a monetary benefit whereas PFL does.

Who has to offer it?

  • It applies to all private sector employers with at least 1 employee (not counting the owner)
  • Employers in the public-sector can opt in through collective bargaining.

What can it be used for?

  • Leave may be taken to participate in providing care, such as physical or psychological care for a family member, to bond with the employee's child during the first twelve months after the child's birth, or the first 12 months after the placement of the child for adoption or foster care or for a qualified military exigency as defined by the FMLA

How much does it pay?

  • January 1, 2018; up to 8 weeks of paid leave at 50% of the employee’s average weekly wage capped at a maximum of 50% of NY average weekly wage (average weekly wage in 2015 was $1,296.48)1;

  • January 1, 2019; up to 10 weeks of paid leave at 55% of the employee’s average weekly wage capped at a maximum of 55% of NY average weekly wage;

  • January 1, 2020; up to 10 weeks of paid leave at 60% of the employee’s average weekly wage capped at a maximum of 60% of NY average weekly wage;

  • January 1, 2021 and thereafter; up to 12 weeks of paid leave at 67% of the employee’s average weekly wage capped at a maximum of 67% of NY weekly wage.

As the industry leader and your expert in New York State DBL we will update you on developments and are creating a dedicated PFL resource & learning center.
Stay tuned!

Receive up-to-date information
on Paid Family Leave:

Effective DateMax. length of paid leavePayable % of the employee’s average weekly wageTo the max % of NY average weekly wage
01/01/20188 weeks50%50%
01/01/201910 weeks55%55%
01/01/202010 weeks60%60%
01/01/202112 weeks67%67%

 

Broker FAQs

What will be decided by June 2017?

Key decisions that will be made include:

  • Setting the maximum employee contribution dollar amount

  • Premium regulation including rating decisions, risk adjustment mechanisms, and minimum loss ratio, if any

  • Whether the implementation may be deferred

 

What does this mean for insurance brokers, carriers, and the industry overall?

How the market will ultimately function, how compensation will be structured, and how exactly PFL will be regulated, depends on pending regulation, which, per the new law, is due no later than June 2017.

 

How does it relate to DBL?

  • PFL will be covered under an employer’s DBL policy.

  • DBL and PFL benefits cannot be collected at the same time.

  • Combined, DBL and PFL have to stay within the 26-week benefit max during any 52 consecutive calendar weeks.

 

Employer FAQs

What information is available for employers so far?

  • You sign your business up for PFL insurance as part of your DBL (statutory short-term disability) coverage (if you are self-insured you can get stand-alone PFL insurance)

  • You will have to cover all eligible employees, while the full cost of premiums will be paid through payroll contributions of the employee.
    • You may choose to share in the premiums with your employees.

  • You must continue the employees' health insurance during leave as if they were not on leave.

  • You may offer an employee who has accrued but unused vacation/personal leave the ability to choose whether to charge all or part of the PFL time to this unused time and receive full salary.

  • Employees returning from PFL are entitled to return to their same or comparable position without loss of benefits they would have accrued otherwise.

 

Employee FAQs

What information is available for employees so far?

  • You must be employed for 26 weeks before you are eligible for PFL (175 days for part-timers);

  • If possible, you should provide 30-days' notice of intent to take PFL;
  • PFL benefits must be used concurrently with FMLA.

  • When returning from PFL, you are entitled to return to their same or comparable position without loss of benefits you would have accrued otherwise;

  • Your employer provides the coverage, you pay for the coverage:
    Your PFL claims will be paid for by your DBL (statutory short-term disability) insurance carrier, under which the employer will have to have to cover all eligible employees, while the full cost of premiums will be paid through payroll contributions of the employee.
    • Your employer may choose to share the premiums with you.

 

Receive up-to-date information
on Paid Family Leave:

 

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