In 2017, the Paid Family and Medical Leave (PFML) program was enacted to provide partial wage replacement to employees on leave for specified family and medical reasons. Employees are eligible for PFML benefits after working 820 hours in a qualifying period. Premium collection began on January 1, 2019, and benefits were payable as of January 1, 2020. The Employment Security Department (ESD) administers the program.
The PFML program includes provisions regarding premiums; coverage; the use, duration, and amount of benefits; and an employer option of a voluntary plan, among other provisions.
Paid family leave benefits are provided:
Paid medical leave benefits are provided for an employee's own serious health condition. Serious health condition is defined by statute and has the same meaning as in the federal Family and Medical Leave Act and its regulations.
Definitions. Family member means the employee's child, grandchild, grandparent, parent, sibling, or spouse. Child means a biological, adopted, or foster child, a stepchild, a child's spouse, or a child to whom the employee stands in loco parentis, is a legal guardian, or is a de facto parent, regardless of age or dependency status. A military exigency relates to leave for short-notice deployments, military events, certain childcare and school activities for a military member's deployment activities, and other specified activities.
Definitions. The definition of family member is expanded to include any individual who regularly resides in the employee's home or where the relationship creates an expectation that the employee care for the person, and that individual depends on the employee for care.
Reporting Requirements. ESD must collaborate with the paid family and medical leave advisory committee to collect and analyze disaggregated data relating to employment protections under the PFML program.
By December 1, 2021, ESD must submit a report to the Legislature with the following information:
By June 30, 2022, and June 30, 2023, ESD must submit a report to the Legislature with the following information:
Other. If the number of individuals utilizing leave under the PFML program as a result of the amended definition of family member in the act exceeds 500 individuals in any calendar year before July 1, 2023, the expenses of the additional leave must be paid by the general fund into the family and medical leave insurance account.
The committee recommended a different version of the bill than what was heard. PRO: All workers are paying into the fund and should be able to use it when needed. Paid family and medical leave has been a lifeline for many Washington families in 2020 and the law previously did not go far enough to protect people's jobs, include part-time workers, or cover specific families. The expanded definition of family member is important to promote equity by immutable characteristics. The bill would benefit important caretakers. Families of workers need these protections now more than ever. Paid leave should be a right not a privilege. The bill provides job security and health benefits to people needing it most, including women and women of color. Workers in large and small companies need the expansion in job protection provided by this bill. Other states have surpassed Washington by offering more equitable protections.
CON: The PFML program has not been fully-implemented and there is concern with changing it before seeing how the program operates. The small business assistance grant program has not been implemented yet and such businesses cannot afford these costs. The bill could increase taxes for Washington residents. This will have a disproportionate impact on small businesses, requiring them to have the same standards as large corporations. This will be a deterrent for small businesses to provide health care benefits. Small businesses do not have the resources a large corporation does with respect to the job protection provision. PFML benefits were only payable for 60 days before the pandemic hit Washington. There is concern with changing a carefully balanced law that is only two-years-old, and not brought to the advisory committee. The close affinity language in the definition of family member is too expansive. There is concern about expansion and what that will do to coverage in cities relating to employee absences. The expansion of medical benefits is a significant and expensive change. PFML is not ready to become a catch-all leave program.