Under federal law, leave taken for an employee's incapacity due to pregnancy, childbirth or related medical condition is governed by FMLA, just like leave for any other "serious health condition" of an employee. However, the CFRA (California Family Rights Act) expressly excludes an employee's incapacity due to pregnancy, childbirth, or related medical condition.
Pregnancy disability leaves under the PDLL run concurrently with leave taken under the FMLA.
Thus, if an employee takes 12 weeks of leave due to her pregnancy, childbirth or related medical condition and the employer gives the proper FMLA notices, the employee will have exhausted her annual entitlement to FMLA leave and will have exhausted 12 weeks of the fourt month PDLL leave entitlement.
Since CFRA doesn't run concurrently with PDLL, CFRA can be taken after PDLL leave. Following a pregnancy disability leave, an employee will still have the right to take a CFRA leave of up to 12 weeks "for reason of the birth of her child, if the child has been born by this date" assuming, of course, that the CFRA leave rights were not exhausted during that year prior to the pregnancy disability leave.
If the maximum amount of both types of leave is taken, the maximum total leave entitlement will be 4 months plus 12 workweeks (4 months of pregnancy disability leave under the PDLL, of which 12 weeks may also be FMLA leave plus 12 workweeks of CFRA leave).
An employee is only entitled to use the maximum amount of pregnancy disability leave if she was actually disabled by pregnancy for four months, and is entitled to CFRA leave only if she meets CFRA eligibiltiy rules and has not previously used the CFRA leave for another purpose.
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