Expanded Bereavement Leave Rights
Take Effect Jan. 1
New rights include time off to grieve
family members, for pregnancy and adoption-related loss
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[December 27, 2022]
The Family Bereavement Leave Act will go into effect
on January 1, 2023, expanding unpaid leave rights for employees
across the State. As the New Year approaches, employers should be
aware of the new requirements under the Act.
The Family Bereavement Leave Act (FBLA) is an amendment to the Child
Bereavement Leave Act (CBLA) that expands leave time requirements to
cover pregnancy loss, failed adoptions or surrogacy agreements,
unsuccessful reproductive procedures, and other diagnoses or events
negatively impacting pregnancy or fertility. The FBLA also requires
employers to provide leave time after the loss of family members
previously not covered by the CBLA, including spouses, domestic
partners, siblings, grandparents, and stepparents.
Employees may take up to two weeks, or 10 working days, of unpaid
leave time for any of the events covered by the FBLA to grieve, to
attend a funeral, or to make arrangements necessitated by the death
of the family member.
Employers may require reasonable documentation to certify that an
employee requesting FBLA leave experienced an event covered by the
Act, but employees are not required to identify the specific event
that qualifies them for the leave.
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Reasonable documentation includes
death certificates, published obituaries, and documentation from
an adoption or surrogacy organization. A
Bereavement Leave form is available on the Department’s website
that may be used as reasonable documentation.
“Workers who experience the death of a loved one or other kinds
of loss such as a miscarriage or a failed adoption should be
able to grieve without the fear of losing their job,” said
Illinois Department of Labor Acting Director Jane Flanagan. “The
Family Bereavement Leave Act ensures that those workers will be
afforded time off from work to process that grief.”
All employers and employees subject to the federal Family and
Medical Leave Act (FMLA) are subject to the FBLA.
[Illinois Office of Communication and
Information]
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