The Department of Labor (DOL) has released a mandatory employee rights poster for the Families First Coronavirus Response Act (FFCRA). Below is the FAQ section of the eAlert from the HR Support Center that we sent out on March 28th. You can order a new All-In-One poster from us by calling 281-491-1400 and we will get it delivered to you.
Each covered employer must post a notice of the Families First Coronavirus Response Act (FFCRA) requirements in a conspicuous place on its premises. An employer may satisfy this requirement by emailing or direct mailing this notice to employees, or posting this notice on an employee information internal or external website.
You are not required to post this notice in multiple languages, but the Department of Labor (Department) is working to translate it into other languages.
No, the FFCRA requirements explained on this notice apply only to current employees.
No, the FFRCA requirements apply only to current employees. Employers are under no obligation to provide the notice of those requirements to prospective employees.
Yes, if you hire a job applicant, you must convey this notice to them, either by email, direct mail, or by posting this notice on the premises or on an employee information internal or external website.
Yes, all covered employers must post this notice regardless of whether their state requires greater protections. The employer must comply with both federal and state law.
Yes. All employers covered by the paid sick leave and expanded family and medical leave provisions of the FFCRA (i.e., certain public sector employers and private sector employers with fewer than 500 employees) are required to post this notice.
The most recent version of this notice was issued on March 25, 2020. Check the Wage and Hour Division's website to ensure that you remain current with all notice requirements.
The notice needs to be displayed in a conspicuous place where employees can see it. If they are able to see it at the main office, it is not necessary to display the notice at your different worksite locations.
No. To obtain notices free of charge, you can click on the "mandatory employee rights poster" hyperlink above or download and print the notice from https://www.dol.gov/agencies/whd/posters
No, you cannot put federal notices in a binder. Generally, employers must display federal notices in a conspicuous place where they are easily visible to all employees—the intended audience.
If all of your employees regularly visit the lunchroom, then you can post all required notices there. If not, then you can post the notices in the break rooms on each floor or in another location where they can easily be seen by employees on each floor.
Yes. Where an employer has employees reporting directly to work in several different buildings, the employer must post all required federal notices in each building, even if the buildings are located in the same general vicinity (e.g., in an industrial park or on a campus).
April 1, 2020.
Please call our office at 281-491-1400 if you have any questions.