By Susan Schoenfeld, JD, Senior Legal Editor
For a Limited Time receive a
FREE Compensation Market Analysis Report! Find out how much you should be paying to attract and retain the best applicants and employees, with
customized information for your industry, location, and job.
Get Your Report Now!
In early 2016, the Wage and Hour Division of the U.S. Department of Labor (DOL) released an Administrator’s Interpretation addressing joint employment under the Fair Labor Standards Act (FLSA) and Migrant and Seasonal Agricultural Worker Protection Act (MSPA). In conjunction with this release, the DOL also issued a new fact sheet on the Family and Medical Leave Act (FMLA) and joint employment.
The new guidance from the DOL identifies common scenarios in which two or more employers jointly employ an employee and are, as a result, jointly liable for compliance. The interpretation and fact sheet compile statutory provisions, regulations, and case law to provide comprehensive guidance on joint employment under FLSA, MSPA, and FMLA so that employers can properly analyze a potential joint employment scenario.
The FMLA and joint employment
Joint employment exists when an employee is employed by two or more employers such that the employers are responsible for compliance with the FMLA. The analysis for determining joint employment under the FMLA is the same as under the FLSA.
Joint employment exists where two or more employers benefit from the employee’s work and are sufficiently related to or associated with each other. For example:
- The employers have an arrangement to share the employee’s services;
- One employer acts in the interest of the other in relation to the employee; or
- The employers share control of the employee, directly or indirectly, because one employer controls, is controlled by, or is under common control with the other employer.
The focus of joint employment is the degree of association between the employers. For example, joint employment may exist where an employee works for two restaurants that are technically separate but have the same managers, jointly coordinate the scheduling of the employee’s hours, and both benefit from that employee’s work.
In these cases, it is important to consider facts that shed light on the degree of association between the employers and how the employers may jointly control the employee. Although not all or even most of these facts need to be present for there to be joint employment, some facts to consider include:
- Who owns or operates the possible joint employers?
- Do the employers have any overlapping officers, directors, executives, or managers?
- Do the employers share control over operations?
- Are the operations of the employers intermingled?
- Does one employer supervise the work of the other?
- Do the employers share supervisory authority over the employee?
- Do the employers treat the employees as a pool of workers available to both of them?
- Do they share clients or customers?
- Are there any agreements between the employers?
Joint employment is important in determining employer coverage and employee eligibility under the FMLA. Joint employers’ responsibilities under the FMLA vary depending on whether they are the primary or secondary employer of the employee taking FMLA leave.
Employer coverage and employee eligibility under the FMLA
According to DOL’s recently released fact sheet, employees who are jointly employed by two employers must be counted by both employers in determining employer coverage and employee eligibility under the FMLA, regardless of whether the employee is maintained on one or both of the employers’ payrolls.
For purposes of employee eligibility, in determining whether a jointly employed employee works at a worksite where the employer employs at least 50 employees within 75 miles, the employee’s worksite is the primary employer’s office from which the employee is assigned or to which the employee reports. However, if the employee has physically worked for at least 1 year at a facility of a secondary employer, the employee’s worksite is that location.
Responsibilities of primary employers
Under the FMLA, the primary employer is responsible for:
- Giving required notices to its employees;
- Providing FMLA leave;
- Maintaining group health insurance benefits during the leave;
- Restoring the employee to the same job or an equivalent job upon return from leave;
- Not interfering with a jointly employed employee’s exercise of or attempt to exercise his or her FMLA rights;
- Refraining from firing or discriminating against an employee for opposing a practice that is unlawful under the FMLA; and
- Keeping all records required by the FMLA with respect to primary employees.
A primary employer must meet all of its obligations under the FMLA even when a secondary employer is not in compliance with the law or does not provide support to the primary employer in meeting these responsibilities.
Responsibilities of secondary employers
The secondary employer, whether an FMLA-covered employer or not, is prohibited from interfering with a jointly employed employee’s exercise of or attempt to exercise his or her FMLA rights or from firing or discriminating against an employee for opposing a practice that is unlawful under the FMLA.
The secondary employer is responsible in certain circumstances for restoring the employee to the same or an equivalent job upon return from FMLA leave (e.g., when the secondary employer is a client of a placement agency and continues to use the services of the agency and the agency places the employee with that client employer). Secondary employers must keep basic payroll and identifying employee data with respect to any jointly employed employees.
A covered secondary employer is also responsible for compliance with all provisions of the FMLA for its regular, permanent workforce.
Chart: Comparing joint employer responsibilities under the FMLA
Perhaps the most helpful information in DOL’s new FMLA joint employer fact sheet is a one-page chart. The chart outlines the responsibilities that primary and secondary employers have under the FMLA, including eligibility, notice, provision of leave, benefits, job restoration, and recordkeeping responsibilities.
Resources
For more information on DOL’s new FMLA joint employer guidance, see:
- DOL’s blog: Are you a joint employer?
- WHD portal: Joint employment guidance
Susan Schoenfeld, JD, is a Senior Legal Editor for BLR’s human resources and employment law publications. Ms. Schoenfeld has practiced in the area of employment litigation and counseling, covering topics such as disability discrimination, wrongful discharge, sexual harassment, and general employment discrimination. She has litigated numerous cases before the U.S. Court of Appeals, state court, and at the U.S. Department of Labor. In addition to litigating employment cases in state and federal court, she provided training and counseling to corporate clients regarding employment-related issues. Prior to entering private practice, Ms. Schoenfeld was an attorney with the Civil Rights Division at the U.S. Department of Labor in Washington, D.C., where she advised federal agencies, drafted regulations, conducted inspector training courses, and litigated cases for the Office of Federal Contract Compliance Programs, the Directorate of Civil Rights, and the Mine Safety and Health Administration. Ms. Schoenfeld received her undergraduate degree, cum laude, with honors, from Union College, and her law degree from the National Law Center at George Washington University. Questions? Comments? Contact Susan at sschoenfeld@blr.com for more information on this topic |