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Summary: Oregon Governor Tina Kotek signed legislation (SB 1515) on March 20, 2024, revising the state’s Family Leave Act (OFLA) to align with the state’s Paid Leave Oregon (PLO) law and simplify leave administration for employers with Oregon employees. These changes take effect on July 1, 2024.
Read on for more information and next steps.
The Oregon Family Leave Act (OFLA) requires employers with at least 25 employees who work in the state to provide eligible employees with up to 12 weeks of job-protected, unpaid leave within a one-year period to care for themselves or family members in cases of death, illness, injury, childbirth, adoption, or foster care placement.
An employee is eligible for OFLA leave if they have worked an average of 25 hours per week for 180 days. During a public health emergency, employees may become eligible for OFLA with 30 days of employment (rather than 180) if they have worked an average of 25 hours a week in the 30 days before taking leave.
Note that the Oregon Military Family Leave Act (OMFLA) provides up to 14 days of job-protected leave per deployment to an employee who is the spouse or domestic partner of a service member (of the US Armed Forces, the National Guard or US military reserve forces) who has been notified of an impending call or order to active duty or who has been deployed. OMFLA leave counts against an employee’s OFLA entitlement, but it remains available even if all OFLA leave has been exhausted. OMFLA eligibility requires employees work an average of 20 hours per week with no minimum length of employment.
The Paid Leave Oregon (PLO) program, passed by the Oregon State Legislature in August 2019, provides a state-administered income replacement program for Oregon workers to take up to 12 weeks (plus an additional two weeks for pregnancy disability) of paid, job-protected leave per year for family leave, medical leave, and safe leave (leave to care for survivors of sexual assault, domestic violence, harassment, or stalking).
All employees working in Oregon (including remote workers) who have earned at least $1,000 in four out of the five quarters before starting leave are covered under PLO, including full-time, part-time, and seasonal employees.
Click here for a prior Risk Strategies article with more detailed information on PLO.
To eliminate duplication of certain OFLA and PLO qualifying events and resulting confusion by employers administering leave requests, SB 1515 was signed into law to align these two Oregon leave laws and simplify leave administration, effective July 1, 2024. Notably, it minimizes employees from “stacking” leave, a practice in which employees take separate leave time under each law for the same qualifying event.
Highlights of the changes under SB 1515 include the following, effective July 1, 2024:
For further reference, see the chart below highlighting the changes to OFLA and PLO before and after July 1, 2024:
Qualifying Events |
||||||
|
Leave for employee’s own serious health condition |
Leave for family member’s serious health condition |
Parental bonding leave |
Sick child leave |
Pregnancy disability leave |
Bereavement leave |
OFLA – in effect until June 30, 2024 |
Yes: 12 weeks |
Yes: 12 weeks |
Yes: 12 weeks |
Yes: 12 weeks |
Yes: 12 additional weeks |
Yes: 12 weeks |
OFLA – effective July 1, 2024 |
No |
Yes: Children only; 12 weeks |
No |
Yes: 12 weeks |
Yes: 12 additional weeks |
Yes: 4 weeks |
PLO – before and after July 1, 2024 |
Yes: 12 weeks |
Yes: 12 weeks |
Yes: 12 weeks |
Yes: 12 weeks |
Yes: 2 additional weeks |
No |
In a related Oregon employee leave development, Oregon also recently finalized regulations impacting the OFLA and the Oregon sick time law. These changes took effect on March 2, 2024.
Although most of the updates were simply technical adjustments for clarification regarding Oregon’s various leave laws, there are several notable changes highlighted below:
SAMPLE LANGUAGE FOR WRITTEN ATTESTATION DEMONSTRATING “AFFINITY” FAMILY RELATIONSHIP
I, (full name) _______________________, share a significant bond with (name of other person) _________________ and they are like a family member to me.
Any facts about your relationship can make it like a family. Common examples include:
Employers with Oregon employees are advised to work with their employment and labor counsel to:
Risk Strategies is closely following updates to the Oregon leave law landscape and will provide updates when available. Contact us directly at benefits@risk-strategies.com.
The contents of this article are for general informational purposes only and Risk Strategies Company makes no representation or warranty of any kind, express or implied, regarding the accuracy or completeness of any information contained herein. Any recommendations contained herein are intended to provide insight based on currently available information for consideration and should be vetted against applicable legal and business needs before application to a specific client.