Donated Sick Leave Bank
jem626
9 Posts
Does anyone have experience with a successfull donated sick leave bank program? We have a lot of very long time tenured employees, and one or two battling cancer. Some people have asked if they can donate their unused leave to the people who need it more, and I'm looking for guidance on how to set it up, how to administer it fairly, and how to keep the one or two chronic "I need a day off" folks from mis-using it. Are there IRS complications, or FMLA complications?
Comments
I would look at things like:
• Eligibility: Your policy needs to state who is eligible for using leave bank time. Are only employees who donate leave to the bank eligible? Are only full-time employees eligible? Are part-time employees eligible on a pro rata basis? Is enrollment required? What if the employee has "wasted" his or her own leave time? Does there have to be substantial time off? Is the potential for a substantial loss of pay required? Must the employee have been absent for a certain number of days? Does all other paid leave have to be exhausted? Is eligibility automatic or must certain factors be weighed?
• Documentation: What forms must be completed to donate time? What forms are needed to apply for leave bank time? What medical information is required?
• Coordination: How is the leave bank coordinated with other benefits such as FMLA, reasonable accommodation under ADA, short-term disability pay, long-term disability pay, and workers’ compensation pay
• Donations: Your policy should address how employees donate time to the leave bank. Can they donate only sick leave or can they donate any type of leave? Is there any limit to the amount of time that can be donated? Can time that is about to be lost be donated? Can time be donated for a specific person? A specific ailment? A specific position? If time is donated for a specific person and that person does not use it, what happens to the donated time? Can it be used for others? Is it returned to the donor? Does it expire?
• Use: What are the purposes for leave bank time? Personal medical leave? FMLA leave? Personal leave? Combinations? Can a supervisor use time donated by a subordinate? Can leave bank time be used one hour at a time? One day at a time? One week at a time?
• Limits: Is there a limit on the leave time that a person can use? Is there a maximum limit that can be accumulated in the leave bank? Does leave donated to the bank ever expire?
• Value: What is the value of the time donated? Are all hours equal? If a person who is paid $20 an hour donates one day, does that translate into two days of leave for an employee who is paid $10 per hour?
• Conflicts: What happens if two employees are eligible to use banked leave, but there is not enough to cover both? Does one get it? Do they share? Does the company solicit donations of more time?
• FLSA. Requirements that exempt employees must take a full day off rather than only a few hours.
• Leave calculations. Whether the leave will be “hour-for-hour,” regardless of pay scale, or will be calculated by wage, and ensuring that recordkeeping accounts for leave under the Family and Medical Leave Act.
Nice list!
Here are a couple more items to consider.
you should read this IRS statement on leave-sharing arrangements. i clipped some it below but you can read it all at http://www.irs.gov/pub/irs-wd/0720017.pdf
"However, this general “assignment of income” rule does not apply to certain situations involving employer-sponsored leave
plans. One situation involves bona fide employer-sponsored (medical) leave-sharing arrangements. Another involves certain qualified employer-sponsored major disaster leave-sharing plans.
The first exception to this general assignment of income rule involves the bona fide employer-sponsored (medical) leave-sharing arrangement described in Rev. Rul. 90-29, 1990-1 C.B. 11. Under the plan in the ruling, employees who suffer medical emergencies may qualify to receive leave surrendered to the employer by other employees or leave deposited by its employees in an employer sponsored leave bank. The ruling holds that the amounts paid by the employer to a leave recipient pursuant to the plan are includable in the gross income of the recipient under § 61 of the Code as
compensation for services provided by that recipient to the employer. Rev. Rul. 90-29
further concludes that these amounts are considered “wages” for employment tax
purposes, including the Federal Insurance Contributions Act (“FICA”), the Federal
Unemployment Tax Act (“FUTA”), the Railroad Retirement Tax Act (“RRTA”), and the
Railroad Unemployment Repayment Tax (“RURT”), and for income tax withholding
purposes, unless otherwise excluded by a specific provision of the Code. The revenue
ruling also holds that an employee who surrenders leave to the employer or deposits
leave in the leave bank does not realize any income and incurs no deductible expense
or loss either upon surrender or deposit of the leave or its use by the recipient
employee. "
We had a donated leave program about 10 years ago, when we had far fewer employees. While the intent is noble, and it helped one employee who was hospitalized a long time with a difficult pregnancy and one who had cancer and eventually died, it was very problematic and difficult to administer, and after much deliberation among the top administrators, it was dropped.