Hunton Employment & Labor Perspectives

Analysis and Development in Employment & Labor Issues

Maryland Becomes the Tenth State to Pass a Paid Family Leave Law

By Ryan M. Bates & Jason P. Brown on April 12, 2022 - Hunton Andrews Kurth LLP

On April 9, 2022, Maryland became just the tenth state (in addition to the District of Columbia) to enact a paid family and medical leave law that covers private-sector workers, after overriding Governor Larry Hogan’s (R) veto.

Neighboring Delaware may soon follow - a similar bill passed the Delaware Senate in March and is pending a vote in the House.

The Maryland law creates a new Title 8.3 to the Annotated Code of Maryland and establishes the state’s “Family and Medical Leave Insurance Program.”・The law covers the vast majority of employers in the state, defined as “a person or governmental entity that employs at least one individual in the state,” and will ensure that covered private sector employees》hose employees who have worked at least 680 hours over the 12-month period immediately preceding the date on which the leave is to begin”ave up to 12 weeks annually of paid time off for certain purposes.・Benefits will replace 90% of weekly wages for an employer’s lowest-income employees (with a smaller percentage for higher-paid workers), up to a maximum of $1,000 per week.

Eligible employees may take paid leave for the following reasons:

A parent could possibly get up to 24 weeks of paid leave if the covered employee needs medical leave during pregnancy and also parental leave after childbirth.

Benefits under the law will not commence until January 1, 2025.・The law will be funded through a payroll tax that is scheduled to begin on October 1, 2023, and which will be split between employers (with 15 or more employees) and employees.・The law directed the state Department of Labor to conduct a study to determine what the tax rate will be.

The measure had broad support among the legislature’s Democratic majority, but Republicans mostly opposed the plan, labelling it a poorly timed financial burden on businesses and employees that are recovering from the pandemic and struggling with high inflation.

While Maryland employers do not need to take immediate steps to respond to this new law, they should be aware that this change is on the horizon and prepare accordingly.