February 23, 2011 - Introduced by Senators Vukmir, Grothman, Lazich and
Darling, cosponsored by Representatives Kapenga, Stone and Honadel.
Referred to Committee on Labor, Public Safety, and Urban Affairs.
SB23,1,4 1An Act to amend 103.10 (1) (b) and 103.10 (1) (c); and to create 103.10 (1m) of
2the statutes; relating to: preemption of city, village, town, or county
3ordinances requiring employers to provide employees with leave from
4employment to deal with family, medical, or health issues.
Analysis by the Legislative Reference Bureau
Under current law, an employer, including the state, that employs at least 50
individuals on a permanent basis must permit an employee who has been employed
by the employer for more than 52 consecutive weeks and who has worked for the
employer for at least 1,000 hours during the preceding 52 weeks to take six weeks
of family leave in a 12-month period and two weeks of medical leave in a 12-month
period. Family leave may be taken for the birth or adoptive placement of a new child
or to care for a child, spouse, or parent who has a serious health condition. Medical
leave may be taken when the employee has a serious health condition that makes the
employee unable to perform the employee's employment duties. An employee is not
entitled to receive wages or salary while taking family or medical leave, but may
substitute, for portions of family or medical leave, other types of paid or unpaid leave
provided by the employer.
This bill states that the provision of family and medical leave that is uniform
throughout the state is a matter of statewide concern and that it would be logically
inconsistent with, would defeat the purpose of, and would go against the spirit of the
state family and medical leave law for a city, village, town, or county to enact an

ordinance that requires employers to provide employees with leave from
employment for any of the following reasons:
1. Because the employee has a physical or mental illness, injury, impairment,
or condition (health condition); is in need of medical diagnosis, care, or treatment of
a health condition; or is in need of preventive medical care.
2. To care for a family member who has a health condition; who is in need of
medical diagnosis, care, or treatment of a health condition; or who is in need of
preventive medical care. The bill defines "family member" as a spouse or domestic
partner of the employee; a parent, child, sibling, including a foster sibling,
brother-in-law, sister-in-law, grandparent, stepgrandparent, or grandchild of an
employee or of an employee's spouse or domestic partner; or any other person who
is related by blood, marriage, or adoption to an employee or to an employee's spouse
or domestic partner and whose close association with the employee, spouse, or
domestic partner makes the person the equivalent of a family member of the
employee, spouse, or domestic partner.
3. Because the employee's absence from work is necessary in order for the
employee to do any of the following:
a. Seek medical attention or obtain psychological or other counseling for the
employee or a family member to recover from any health condition caused by
domestic abuse, sexual abuse, or stalking.
b. Obtain services for the employee or a family member from an organization
that provides services to victims of domestic abuse, sexual abuse, or stalking.
c. Relocate the residence of the employee or of a family member due to domestic
abuse, sexual abuse, or stalking.
d. Initiate, prepare for, or testify, assist, or otherwise participate in any civil or
criminal action or proceeding relating to domestic abuse, sexual abuse, or stalking.
4. To deal with any other family, medical, or health issues of the employee or
of a family member.
Therefore, the bill requires the state family and medical leave law to be
construed as an enactment of statewide concern for the purpose of providing family
and medical leave that is uniform throughout the state. As such, the bill prohibits
a city, village, town, or county from enacting and administering an ordinance
requiring an employer to provide employees with leave from employment, paid or
unpaid, for any of the reasons specified in the bill and provides that a city, village,
town, or county ordinance requiring leave from employment for those reasons that
is in effect on the effective date of the bill is void.
The people of the state of Wisconsin, represented in senate and assembly, do
enact as follows:
SB23, s. 1 1Section 1. 103.10 (1) (b) of the statutes is amended to read:
SB23,3,3
1103.10 (1) (b) "Employee" Except as provided in sub. (1m) (b) 2., "employee"
2means an individual employed in this state by an employer, except the employer's
3parent, spouse, domestic partner, or child.
SB23, s. 2 4Section 2. 103.10 (1) (c) of the statutes is amended to read:
SB23,3,105 103.10 (1) (c) Except as provided in sub. (14) (1m) (b) 3., "employer" means a
6person engaging in any activity, enterprise or business in this state employing at
7least 50 individuals on a permanent basis. "Employer" includes the state and any
8office, department, independent agency, authority, institution, association, society or
9other body in state government created or authorized to be created by the
10constitution or any law, including the legislature and the courts.
SB23, s. 3 11Section 3. 103.10 (1m) of the statutes is created to read:
SB23,3,2012 103.10 (1m) Statewide concern; uniformity. (a) The legislature finds that the
13provision of family and medical leave that is uniform throughout the state is a matter
14of statewide concern and that the enactment of an ordinance by a city, village, town,
15or county that requires employers to provide employees with leave from employment,
16paid or unpaid, for any of the reasons specified in par. (c) would be logically
17inconsistent with, would defeat the purpose of, and would go against the spirit of this
18section. Therefore, this section shall be construed as an enactment of statewide
19concern for the purpose of providing family and medical leave that is uniform
20throughout the state.
SB23,3,2121 (b) In this subsection:
SB23,3,2222 1. "Domestic abuse" has the meaning given in s. 968.075 (1) (a).
SB23,3,2323 2. "Employee" has the meaning given in s. 104.01 (2) (a).
SB23,3,2424 3. "Employer" has the meaning given in s. 104.01 (3) (a).
SB23,4,7
14. "Family member" means a spouse or domestic partner of an employee; a
2parent, child, sibling, including a foster sibling, brother-in-law, sister-in-law,
3grandparent, stepgrandparent, or grandchild of an employee or of an employee's
4spouse or domestic partner; or any other person who is related by blood, marriage,
5or adoption to an employee or to an employee's spouse or domestic partner and whose
6close association with the employee, spouse, or domestic partner makes the person
7the equivalent of a family member of the employee, spouse, or domestic partner.
SB23,4,98 5. "Health condition" means a physical or mental illness, injury, impairment,
9or condition.
SB23,4,1210 6. "Sexual abuse" means conduct that is in violation of s. 940.225, 944.30,
11948.02, 948.025, 948.05, 948.051, 948.055, 948.06, 948.085, 948.09, or 948.10 or that
12is in violation of s. 940.302 (2) if s. 940.302 (2) (a) 1. b. applies.
SB23,4,1413 7. "Stalking" means to engage in a course of conduct, as defined in s. 940.32 (1)
14(a), that meets the criteria of s. 940.32 (2) (a).
SB23,4,1715 (c) Subject to par. (d), a city, village, town, or county may not enact and
16administer an ordinance requiring an employer to provide an employee with leave
17from employment, paid or unpaid, for any of the following reasons:
SB23,4,1918 1. Because the employee has a health condition, is in need of medical diagnosis,
19care, or treatment of a health condition, or is in need of preventive medical care.
SB23,4,2220 2. To care for a family member who has a health condition, who is in need of
21medical diagnosis, care, or treatment of a health condition, or who is in need of
22preventive medical care.
SB23,4,2423 3. Because the employee's absence from work is necessary in order for the
24employee to do any of the following:
SB23,5,3
1a. Seek medical attention or obtain psychological or other counseling for the
2employee or a family member to recover from any health condition caused by
3domestic abuse, sexual abuse, or stalking.
SB23,5,54 b. Obtain services for the employee or a family member from an organization
5that provides services to victims of domestic abuse, sexual abuse, or stalking.
SB23,5,76 c. Relocate the residence of the employee or of a family member due to domestic
7abuse, sexual abuse, or stalking.
SB23,5,98 d. Initiate, prepare for, or testify, assist, or otherwise participate in any civil or
9criminal action or proceeding relating to domestic abuse, sexual abuse, or stalking.
SB23,5,1110 4. To deal with any other family, medical, or health issues of the employee or
11of a family member.
SB23,5,1312 (d) This subsection does not affect an ordinance affecting leave from
13employment of an employee of a city, village, town, or county.
SB23,5,1714 (e) Any city, village, town, or county ordinance requiring an employer to provide
15an employee with leave from employment, paid or unpaid, for any of the reasons
16specified in par. (c) that is in effect on the effective date of this paragraph .... [LRB
17inserts date], is void.
SB23, s. 4 18Section 4. Initial applicability.
SB23,5,2219 (1) Collective bargaining agreements. This act first applies to an employee
20who is affected by a collective bargaining agreement that contains provisions
21inconsistent with this act on the day on which the collective bargaining agreement
22expires or is extended, modified, or renewed, whichever occurs first.
SB23,5,2323 (End)
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