The
Uniformed Services Employment and Reemployment
Rights Act (USERRA)
USERRA (“Uniformed Services Employment and
Reemployment Rights Act”) provides reemployment rights to
employees called to active duty military service under
certain circumstances; it prohibits discrimination and
retaliation in employment against uniform service members;
and it provides health insurance protection for service
members and their families.
The basic principles of USERRA require employers to:
Return employees who have undertaken military service to
the same standing they would have held had they never left
for military service, and
Treat employees that serve in the military the same as
their colleagues who remain in the workplace.
Specifically, employers cannot, by reason of an employee’s
active military duty or training obligations, deny that
employee:
Initial employment
Reemployment
Retention in employment
Promotion
Seniority or any benefit, including health
insurance and pension
Re-employment: USERRA guarantees employees the right to be
re-employed at their same or similar job for up to five
years from the time they are called-up for military service.
Seniority: Re-employed individuals are entitled to all the
seniority that they had on the date they commenced service
in the uniformed service, as well as any additional
seniority rights and benefits they would have received if
they had been continuously employed.
Health Insurance: When the employee has family health care
coverage, the plan must allow the person to elect to
continue coverage for the person’s dependents. The employee
may be required to pay no more than 102% of the full premium
under the plan, unless their absence is less than 31 days.
Those absent less than 31 days pay only the employee share.
Pension: When an employee on military leave has pension
benefits, he or she must be treated as if continuously
employed.
EMPLOYER OBLIGATIONS AND
EXEMPTIONS
Change in business
circumstances
Employers do not have to reemploy returning service members if
business circumstances have changed so much that it would be
impossible or unreasonable.
Dishonorable discharge
A serving employee who receives a dishonorable or bad conduct
discharge loses all rights under USERRA.
If the violations of USERRA are found to be willful, employers
must pay the employee liquidated damages, attorneys' fees, and
costs.
The recent changes to USERRA also increased the health insurance
continuation coverage requirements from 18 months to 24 months.
Employers who provide health insurance to their employees must
now offer 24 months of continuation coverage to employees on
military leave under USERRA. For the first 30 days of military
leave, employees may receive the continuation coverage at their
normal premium rate. For leaves greater than 30 days, the
employee may be required to pay up to 102% of the full premium
rate for the duration of the continuation coverage, much like
the coverage offered departing employees under COBRA.
Effective March 10, 2005, all employers, regardless of size,
must post notice to all employees of their rights and benefits
under the Uniformed Services Employment and Reemployment Rights
Act (USERRA). The new posting requirements were signed into law
on December 10, 2004 as part of the Veterans Benefits
Improvement Act of 2004, which also modified and extended
housing, education and other benefits for veterans. The
Department of Labor (DOL) has developed a model notice, which
employers are required to post "where employers customarily
place notices for employees."