Donated Leave
Effective March 25, 2003, amendments to Sections 25-3-93,
25-3-95 and 25-3-91 of Mississippi Code of 1972 were signed into law,
allowing state employees to donate accrued personal or major medical
leave to other state employees who are suffering from a catastrophic
injury or illness1, or to another employee who has a member
of his/her immediate family2 who is suffering from a
catastrophic injury or illness. This law provides paid leave for
employees with a catastrophic injury or illness who have exhausted all
other paid leave.
FORMS
Leave
Donation Eligibility Certification [Word]
Leave
Donation Form [pdf]
1 Catastrophic
injury or illness: Catastrophic
injury or illness is defined as a life-threatening injury or illness of
an employee or a member of an employee's immediate family which totally
incapacitates the employee from work, as verified by a licensed
physician, and forces the employee to exhaust all leave time earned by
that employee, resulting in the loss of compensation from the state for
the employee. Conditions that are short-term in nature, including, but
not limited to, common illnesses such as influenza and the measles, and
common injuries, are not catastrophic. Chronic illnesses or injuries,
such as cancer or major surgery, which result in intermittent absences
from work and which are long-term in nature and require long
recuperation periods may be considered catastrophic.
2 Immediate
family (for donated leave purposes): Spouse, parent, stepparent,
sibling, child or stepchild.
The Family and Medical Leave Act (FMLA) of
1993 requires covered employers to provide up to twelve (12) weeks of
unpaid, job-protected leave to "eligible" employees for certain family
and medical reasons. This includes serious health conditions, defined
as an illness, injury, impairment, or physical or mental condition that
makes the employee unable to perform the employee’s job. Consequently,
an employee with a medical condition that meets the definition of
catastrophic injury or illness under Sections 25-3-93, 25-3-95 and
25-3-91 of Mississippi Code of 1972 and who meets the eligibility
requirements to receive donated leave, also may meet FMLA eligibility
requirements. In addition to any other FMLA leave you have used (or any
unused portion of your entitlement), all Donated Leave time taken will
reduce your twelve (12) week FMLA entitlement for the fiscal year in
which it occurs. If an employee has FMLA eligibility and receives
donated leave, FMLA and donated leave will run concurrently.
Upon notification of an "FMLA eligible" situation, the FMLA requires employers to give employees written notice that their leave time in regard to the situation will be deducted from their twelve-week FMLA entitlement. The information provided above serves as notice that your twelve-week FMLA entitlement will be reduced by the amount of any Donated Leave time used by you.