HR-9261-119
Referred to the Committee on Oversight and Government Reform, and in addition to the Committees on Veterans' Affairs, and House Administration, for a period to be subsequently determined by the Speaker, in each case for consideration of such provisions as fall within the jurisdiction of the committee concerned.
Sponsored by Donald Beyer (D-VA)
What it does
This bill would expand paid family and medical leave for federal employees by converting what is currently unpaid leave into paid leave for a broader set of qualifying reasons. It would add new leave categories covering pregnancy loss, failed fertility treatments, failed adoptions, surrogacy arrangements, and leave for employees or their family members who are victims of domestic violence, dating violence, sexual assault, sex trafficking, or stalking. The bill would apply these changes across virtually all federal employment categories, including Title 5 employees, congressional staff, postal workers, FAA and TSA employees, Veterans Affairs employees, and D.C. court employees.
Who benefits
Federal civilian employees across all branches and agencies who need leave for newly covered reasons — estimated at roughly 2.3 million executive branch workers plus congressional, postal, and D.C. court staff. Employees experiencing pregnancy loss, fertility treatment failures, or failed adoptions who currently have no paid leave entitlement for those events. Federal employees who are victims of domestic violence, sexual assault, or stalking, who would gain paid time to seek medical care, legal services, or safe housing. Family members of federal employees who are victims of qualifying violence, since the employee could use leave to assist them. Victim services organizations that would see increased utilization. Surrogates employed by the federal government who give birth under surrogacy arrangements.
Who is hurt
Federal agencies that would bear increased payroll and administrative costs for expanded leave coverage. Taxpayers who fund federal employee compensation, as the bill increases the cost of the federal workforce. Employees who fail to complete the required post-leave work obligation and may owe reimbursement of agency health insurance contributions. Private-sector workers who receive no comparable federal mandate for their employers, potentially widening the gap between federal and private employment benefits. Small contractors and vendors dependent on federal agency productivity who may experience staffing disruptions during extended leave periods.
Supporters argue
Supporters argue that the federal government should model the employment standards it encourages in the private sector, and that the current system leaves significant gaps — federal employees experiencing pregnancy loss or fertility treatment failures receive no paid leave, forcing them to use unrelated sick leave or go unpaid during already difficult circumstances. They contend that adding paid leave for domestic violence victims addresses a documented workplace productivity and safety issue, noting that the CDC estimates intimate partner violence costs U.S. employers $8.3 billion annually in lost productivity and medical costs. Supporters also argue that expanding leave parity across all federal employment categories — including postal workers and D.C. court employees who were previously excluded — corrects an inequity within the federal workforce itself.
Opponents argue
Opponents argue that expanding paid leave increases the cost of the federal workforce at a time of significant fiscal pressure, and that the bill's broad definitions — particularly the open-ended "qualifying act of violence" category and the expansive definition of "family member" — create verification challenges and potential for abuse that could be difficult for agencies to manage. They contend that the work obligation repayment mechanism is a weak deterrent, since agencies can only recover health insurance contributions rather than the full value of paid leave received, leaving taxpayers exposed to the full salary cost of leave taken by employees who subsequently depart. Opponents further argue that the bill's domestic violence leave provisions, while well-intentioned, rely on self-certification via sworn statement before formal certification is obtained, which may be difficult to audit or enforce consistently across hundreds of federal agencies.