(1) For an employee on paid family or medical leave, a weekly benefit amount is prorated when:
(a) The employee reports hours worked for wages;
(b) The employee reports hours for paid sick leave, paid vacation leave, or other paid time off that is not considered a supplemental benefit payment as defined in WAC
192-500-180; or
(c) The employee files a weekly application for benefits that contains a day or days for which the employee was not approved for paid family or medical leave.
(2) If an employee reports hours under subsection (1)(a) or (b) of this section, proration will be calculated as specified by RCW
50A.15.020(2).
(3) If an employee is approved for leave for part of a week under subsection (1)(c) of this section, proration for that week will occur as follows:
(a) The employee's typical workweek hours are multiplied by the number of days approved for leave, then divided by seven. The result is rounded down to the nearest whole hour. This amount is the employee's adjusted typical workweek hours.
(b) Any hours worked or taken as paid time off as reported by the employee are then subtracted from the employee's adjusted typical workweek hours. This amount will be the number of hours of paid family or medical leave claimed for that week.
(c) The number of hours claimed for that week are then divided by the employee's typical workweek hours to produce a percentage.
(d) The resulting percentage is then multiplied by the employee's normal weekly benefit amount. The resulting amount, rounded down to the nearest whole dollar, is the employee's benefit payment for that week.
Example 1: An employee has already served a waiting period in the claim year and files a claim for a week of paid medical leave. The employee typically works forty hours a week at eight hours per day. In the week for which the employee is claiming, the employee claimed one day of paid medical leave and worked the other four days. This employee's weekly benefit is usually eight hundred dollars. The weekly benefit would then be prorated by the hours on paid medical leave (eight hours) relative to the typical workweek hours (forty hours). Eight hours is twenty percent of forty hours. The employee's weekly benefit would be prorated to twenty percent for a total of one hundred sixty dollars.
Example 2: An employee with typical workweek hours of forty and a weekly benefit amount of one thousand dollars is approved for leave through Thursday. The employee is not approved for leave Friday or Saturday. For this week only, the following proration will occur:
(a) The employee's typical workweek hours (forty) are multiplied by the number of approved days of leave for that week (five) and then divided by seven and rounded down. The result is an adjusted typical workweek hours of twenty-eight.
(b) The employee reports no hours of work or paid time off for that week. The resulting number of hours claimed for that week are twenty-eight.
(c) The number of hours claimed for that week (twenty-eight) are then divided by the employee's normal typical workweek hours (forty). This results in a percentage of seventy percent.
(d) The percentage (seventy) is then multiplied by the employee's weekly benefit amount (one thousand). For that week, the employee will receive seven hundred dollars.
Example 3: An employee with typical workweek hours of forty and a weekly benefit amount of one thousand dollars is approved for leave through Thursday. The employee is not approved for leave Friday or Saturday. For this week only, the following proration will occur:
(a) The employee's typical workweek hours (forty) are multiplied by the number of approved days of leave for that week (five) and then divided by seven and rounded down. The result is an adjusted typical workweek hours of twenty-eight.
(b) The employee reports eight hours of work and eight hours of paid time for that week. The adjusted workweek hours are reduced to reflect sixteen hours of work and paid time. The resulting number of hours claimed for that week are twelve.
(c) The number of hours claimed for that week (twelve) are then divided by the employee's normal typical workweek hours (forty). This results in a percentage of thirty percent.
(d) The percentage (thirty) is then multiplied by the employee's weekly benefit amount (one thousand dollars). For that week, the employee will receive three hundred dollars.
[Statutory Authority: RCW
50A.05.060 and
50A.15.020. WSR 21-18-082, § 192-620-035, filed 8/30/21, effective 9/30/21. Statutory Authority: RCW
50A.05.060 and
50A.25.030. WSR 21-11-009, § 192-620-035, filed 5/7/21, effective 6/7/21. Statutory Authority: RCW
50A.05.060. WSR 20-20-073, § 192-620-035, filed 10/2/20, effective 11/2/20. Statutory Authority: RCW
50A.04.215. WSR 19-23-090, § 192-620-035, filed 11/19/19, effective 12/20/19.]