California Employer Advisor - The Award-Winning Guide to Employment Law and Employee Relations
Home | Topics | HR Policies & Forms | Special Reports | About | Search | Member Log-In
 ABOUT US
About This Site
Editorial Review Board
Mission Statement
Subscribe
 NEWS & ADVICE
Most Recent Articles
Topics
Search
Upcoming Webinars
Webinars On Demand
Online Exclusive
Subscribe To RSS
 RESOURCES
HR Policies & Forms
Special Reports
Checklists
Required Notices
Supervisor PDFs
Ask an Editor
HRMC Library
Reference Links
Products
101 Must-Have Policies—Fully Editable and Customizable for Your Workplace!
 HELP
Account/Login Help
Contact Us
Privacy Policy
FAQs
Our Guarantee
Text Size
New Federal Workplace Poster Update
Discrimination, Harassment, and Retaliation: A Complete Manual for California Employers
Hiring and Retention for California Employers
The Complete Guide to Recordkeeping in California
A Publication of California Employer Resources
Home | Weekly E-Alert Articles | Employment Law Tip: 5 Tips for Draft . . .

Employment Law Tip: 5 Tips for Drafting Bereavement Leave Policies
4/5/2006
Printer-Friendly Format

It's a sad situation that every employer must face at one time or another--the death of someone in an employee's family. While there's no law in California requiring private employers to provide bereavement leave in this situation, most employers do allow employees a few days off when an immediate family member dies, and sometimes the leave is paid.

If you're a private-sector employer, you can set whatever bereavement leave policy you want, as long as the policy applies to all employees uniformly and is enforced consistently. And it's a good idea to have your policy in writing, so the terms will be clear to an employee who needs time off in a hurry.


Get tips like this in your email in-box every week—sign up for the California Employer Advisor Weekly E-Alert.

Here are five points to consider when drafting a bereavement policy:

  1. Define who qualifies as "immediate family." Most policies define immediate family as an employee's spouse, parent, stepparent, sibling, child, stepchild, grandparent, father-in-law, mother-in-law, brother-in-law, sister-in-law, son-in-law, daughter-in-law, or grandchild. Some employers also permit bereavement leave for the death of an employee's domestic partner.
  2. Specify whether the leave will be paid or unpaid.
  3. Specify the number of days that may be taken. Three days off is standard.
  4. Address whether any documentation of the need for leave will be required (such as a death certificate or obituary).
  5. Consider whether you will offer a one-day "funeral leave" to permit an employee to attend the funeral of a close non-family member.

For state employees, the rules are different. State employees are entitled to three days off with pay upon the death of a person related by blood, adoption, marriage, a registered domestic partner or registered domestic partner's family member, or any person residing in the employee's immediate household at the time of death. To take the leave, the employee must provide advance notice to his or her immediate supervisor and provide documentation substantiating the need for leave. If the death occurred outside the state, the employee may take up to two additional days of bereavement leave, which the employee can take unpaid or as a charge against accrued sick leave. If additional time off is needed, the employee can use accrued vacation, comp time or days without pay if authorized.




Printer-Friendly Format
2013 California Employment Law Update
 TOPICS
Complete Topic List
Most Popular
Benefits & Leave
Compensation
Discrimination
Harassment
Health & Safety
Hiring
HR Administration
New Legislation
Performance/Termination
Wage & Hour
CER has received 14 Editorial Excellence Awards