Human Resource Blog

Where HR Professionals Seek Answers

A Practical Source For Your Daily HR Needs.Lets Build An HR Blog Community Together! Want To Share Your HR Knowledge Or Gain Knowledge Through Other Professionals?Lets Discuss HR!

Mar21

New Mexico FMLA

Attendance Management
Vacation Request / Response Form
Weekly Time Sheets
Attendance Calendar for 2008, 2009, or 2010
Annual Attendance Tracker
Vacation Request Form for 2008, 2009, 2010 (Calendar)
Detailed Absence Report
Employment Training
Employee Warning Notice
Employee Counseling Report
Performance Improvement Plan
Forklift Safety Kit
HR Management
Confidential Employee Folder
Confidential Employee Medical Folder
Job File Worksheet Folder
Daily EEO Applicant Flow Log
Workplace Information Sheets
Request to Inspect Personnel Files

Which employees in New Mexico are covered by the FMLA?

The Family and Medical Leave Act is a federal Act that covers employees across the country in all states as long as both the employer and the employee qualify for coverage. When an employee and employer both qualify for coverage, the employee can take up to 12 weeks off of work each year in order to tend to their own medical conditions or to the medical conditions of a covered family member.

In order for an employee to qualify to take FMLA time off, the employee needs to have worked for a covered employer for at least 1,250 hours out o the previous year. Those 1,250 hours do not have to have been performed in consecutive weeks. A covered employer is one that has at least 50 employee that work within a 75-mile radius of the employee that wishes to take the FMLA time off.

When an employee takes time off through the FMLA, the employee should be able to return to work at the end of the period of time off to have the same job or an equivalent job to the one that he or she had prior to taking the time off. Also, the employee should be able to have the same salary and benefits that he or she had prior to taking the time off, including seniority.

Employees that are covered may be able to take time off for the following reasons:

·         To care for their own medical conditions

·         To care for the medical conditions of a spouse

·         To care for a child, as long as the child is under the age of 18

·         To care for a parent, as long as the employee is over the age of 18 and as long as the parent is a biological parent and not an in-law

·         For the birth of a child, or after a child has been adopted or taken in through foster care. CB

This entry was posted on Friday, March 21st, 2008 at 11:23 pm and is filed under
Attendance Management, Employment Training, Human Resources Management.
You can follow any responses to this entry through the RSS 2.0 feed.
You can leave a response, or trackback from your own site.

Leave a Reply





  • [ Back ]
Home Ask a Question Archives

© 2008 HumanResourceBlog.com, All Rights Reserved