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FMLA Policy

MidAmerican Energy Holdings Company's Family Medical Leave
Policy is designed to comply with all applicable federal and state laws. In
general, family medical leave will be administered according to the Family
Medical Leave Act of 1993 (FMLA) and the National Defense Authorization Act of
2008. The administration of this policy will also comply with applicable state
law where such state law provides a greater benefit. FMLA does not affect any
federal or state law prohibiting discrimination or supersede any state or local
law or collective bargaining agreement which provides greater family or medical
leave rights.
For a summary of employee rights and responsibilities under FMLA and the
National Defense Authorization Act please review
Appendix C-WH Publication 1420
that is provided by the Wage and Hour Division of the U.S. Department of Labor.
Eligibility
An employee becomes eligible for FMLA after completing one year of service and
having worked at least 1,250 hours in the 12 months preceding the leave. For
employees serving in the U.S. Armed Forces, the hours such an employee should
have worked from the date of hire, but for his or her military service, are
credited toward the employee's required 1,250 hours worked for FMLA eligibility.
Basic Leave Entitlement
An eligible employee may take FMLA for the following reasons:
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For incapacity due
to pregnancy, prenatal medical care or child birth. |
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To care for the
employee's child after birth or placement for adoption or
foster care. |
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To care for the
employee's spouse, son, daughter or parent who has a serious
health condition. |
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For a serious health
condition that makes the employee unable to perform the
employee's job. |
An employee is entitled to a combined maximum of up to 12 weeks leave in a
rolling 12-month period for one, or a combination of reason(s) listed above.
Leave for birth, adoption or fostering a child is expected to be taken within 12
months of the event. When both spouses are employed by the company, employees
are entitled to a combined leave of up to 12 weeks in a rolling 12-month period
for birth, adoption, fostering of a child or care of the employee's parent with
a serious health condition. Each spouse may take 12 weeks for his or her own or
a nonparent family member's serious health condition.
Military Leave Entitlements
In addition to the basic FMLA leave entitlement above, employees who are members
of the U.S. Armed Forces are entitled to leave in the following circumstances:
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For a qualifying
exigency such as: (1) a short-notice deployment (2) to
attend military events and related activities (3) for
childcare and school activities (4) to make financial and
legal arrangements associated with military duty (5) for
counseling (6) rest and recuperation (7) post-deployment
activities and (8) additional activities where the employer
and employee agree to the leave arising out of the fact the
spouse, or a son, daughter or parent of the employee is on
active duty or has been notified of an impending call or
order to active duty in the U.S. Armed Forces in support of
a contingency operation. |
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An eligible employee
who is the spouse, son, daughter, parent or next of kin of
a covered service member shall be entitled to a total of 26
workweeks of leave during a 12-month period to care for the
service member (available during a single 12-month period).
A covered service member is a current member of the U.S.
Armed Forces, including a member of the National Guard or
Reserves, who has a serious injury or illness incurred in
the line of duty on active duty that may render the service
member medically unfit to perform his or her duties for
which the service member is undergoing medical treatment,
recuperation or therapy; or is in outpatient status; or is
on the temporary disability retired list. |

Definition of a Serious Health Condition and Intermittent Leave
A serious health condition is an illness, injury, impairment or physical or mental condition
that involves either an overnight stay in a medical care facility, or continuing treatment by a
health care provider for a condition that either prevents the employee from performing the
functions of the employee's job, or prevents the qualified family member from participating in
school or other daily activities.
Subject to certain conditions, the requirement of continuing treatment may be met by a period of
incapacity of more than three consecutive calendar days combined with at least two visits to a
health care provider, or one visit and a regimen of continuing treatment, or incapacity due to
pregnancy or incapacity due to a chronic condition. Other conditions may meet the definition of
continuing treatment.
FMLA leave may be taken on an intermittent or reduced schedule basis in certain circumstances
which include medical necessity or military qualifying events. Intermittent or reduced scheduled
leave is FMLA leave taken in separate blocks of time due to a single qualifying reason and any
certified leave reducing the employee's usual number of hours per workweek or hours per workday.
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Example: A
full-time employee's serious health condition requires
treatment for four hours of medication/treatment at a local
health facility once a week. If FMLA certified, the four
hours the employee must take each week would be counted
towards the employee's annual eligible FMLA entitlement. |
Employee Responsibilities
Employees must provide 30 days advance notice of the need to take FMLA leave when the need is
foreseeable. When 30 days notice is not possible, the employee must provide notice as soon as
practicable using the company's normal call-in procedures. Employees must make reasonable
efforts to schedule leave for planned medical treatment to avoid disrupting company operations.
Employees must provide sufficient information for the employer to determine if the leave may
qualify for FMLA protection and the anticipated timing and duration of the leave. Sufficient
information may include that the employee is unable to perform their normal job functions, a family
member is unable to perform daily activities, a need for hospitalization or continuing treatment by a
health care provider or circumstances supporting the need for military family leave. Employees need
also state if the requested leave is for a reason for which FMLA leave was previously taken or
certified. Employees will be required to provide a certification and periodic recertification supporting
the need for leave.
Use of Paid Leave Concurrently with FMLA Leave
Employees must use all paid leave available to them concurrently with FMLA leave. Employees
receiving workers' compensation or short term disability payments that do not fully equal their
regular earnings may use accrued paid leave to supplement those payments up to their regular
earnings amount until accrued paid leave is exhausted. The company allows for an exception to the
use of all paid leave concurrently with unpaid FMLA leave. Employees may withhold up to 80 hours
of accrued paid vacation for use outside of FMLA leave. Any accrued paid vacation in excess of 80
hours must be used concurrently with unpaid FMLA leave. When all other paid leave is exhausted,
FMLA leave will be unpaid. In using paid leave, employees must comply with the company's normal
paid leave policies.
Benefits and Protections
Group health plan benefits will be maintained during eligible FMLA leave. Upon return from FMLA
leave, most employees must be restored to their original or equivalent positions with equivalent
pay, benefits and other employment terms.
Use of FMLA leave will not result in the loss of any employment benefit that accrued prior to the
start of the FMLA leave.
Employer Responsibilities
The company must advise employees of their rights and responsibilities. If FMLA leave is requested,
the company must inform the employee if the requested leave is eligible and FMLA protected and
designated. Also, the company must advise the employee if any additional information is required.
If the requested leave is determined not eligible, the company must advise the employee the leave
is ineligible and give the employee a reason why the request is ineligible.
The company must also provide information to update the employee about the amount of leave
counted against the employee's annual entitlement.
Unlawful Acts
FMLA makes it unlawful for any employer to:
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Interfere with,
restrain or deny the exercise of any right provided under
FMLA. |
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Discharge or
discriminate against any person for opposing any practice
made unlawful by FMLA or for involvement in any proceeding
under or relating to FMLA. |
Enforcement
An employee may file a complaint with the U.S. Department of Labor or may bring a private lawsuit
against an employer for an employer's interference with an employee's rights under FMLA.
For access to complete FMLA guidelines and procedures, review the Family and Medical Leave
Procedures. Additional benefits may apply according to the laws of the state in which the employee
works.
These policies supersede and revoke any and all past
policies and practices, oral and written representations, or statements
regarding terms and conditions of employment concerning the subject matter
covered herein. MidAmerican Energy Holdings Company reserves the right to add
to, delete, change or revoke these policies at any time, with or without notice.
These policies do not create a contract between MidAmerican Energy Holdings
Company and any employee, nor do they create any entitlement to employment or
any benefit provided by MidAmerican Energy Holdings Company to its employees. |
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©2009 MidAmerican Energy
Holdings Company. All rights reserved.
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