Overview:
Many
states and the District of Columbia now require employers to provide paid sick
leave or other mandated paid leave to employees, and a number of municipalities
also impose local paid sick leave requirements. The landscape has continued to
change in recent years. For example, Alaska and Nebraska passed mandatory paid
sick leave laws through the November 2024 election process, with Alaska’s law
taking effect on July 1, 2025 and Nebraska’s on October 1, 2025. California
increased the minimum paid sick leave requirement from 24 hours/3 days to 40
hours/5 days, and Connecticut expanded coverage effective 2025 and again in
2026, making older compliance assumptions risky for employers.
Do you have a Federal Contract?
If
so, you may be required to provide paid sick leave to employees working on
covered federal contracts.
Do you have a contract with a municipality?
If
so, have you checked the fine print to see whether local rules or contract
terms require you to offer paid sick leave or equivalent protected paid leave
to your employees?
Every Law is Different
One
thing to know is that every state and municipal law requiring mandatory paid
sick leave is different. Trying to comply with all of them is causing much
confusion. Waiting periods, accrual rules, use requirements, carryover rules,
covered family members, and documentation standards can vary significantly from
one jurisdiction to another. In some places, the requirement is specifically
paid sick leave; in others, it is a broader paid leave mandate, which still
affects PTO policies, payroll administration, and handbook language.
Is Your PTO Plan Obsolete?
PTO,
or Paid Time Off programs that combine vacation and sick leave into one bucket
of time off, was the trend for many years. With the growth of state and local
leave mandates, many organizations are re-evaluating whether a single PTO bank
still works for compliance purposes. Organizations can still maintain PTO
plans, but they need to understand the cost, payout, and compliance
implications in each jurisdiction where employees work.
In
this webinar, we will review mandatory paid sick leave laws currently in place,
examine many of the differences among them, and go over how to transition from
a Sick/Vacation policy to a PTO policy, as well as making the transition from a
PTO plan to a Sick/Vacation plan.
Areas
covered in the session:
The
Agenda of this Webinar is:
- Current
Mandatory Paid Sick Leave Laws in place.
- A
review of the different Mandatory Paid Sick Leave Requirements
- Examples
of the Quandary of Compliance
- A
comparison of PTO policies vs. Sick/Vacation
- Conducting
a cost-benefit analysis for both plans
- Planning
for change
- Communication
the change
- Action
Items for participants
Why
should you attend?
Mandatory
paid sick leave laws continue to expand and evolve across states and
municipalities, creating a complex compliance environment for employers.
Understanding which rules apply to your organization—and how they interact with
existing PTO policies, attendance rules, and payroll practices—is essential to
avoiding costly mistakes. This session will help you understand the key
requirements behind these laws and what they mean for your organization’s
day-to-day operations.
You
will gain practical insight into how different jurisdictions approach paid sick
leave, where the most common compliance pitfalls occur, and how employers can
structure policies that work across multiple locations. The webinar will also
explore the strategic decision many organizations face today—whether to
maintain a combined PTO plan or separate sick and vacation leave policies—and
the operational implications of each approach.
By
attending, you will walk away with a clearer understanding of the current paid
sick leave landscape and practical ideas for reviewing and updating your
time-off policies. Whether you manage compliance for a single location or
oversee employees across multiple states, this session will help you approach
paid sick leave requirements with greater confidence and clarity.
Handouts:
Attendees
will gain access to exclusive handouts, including presentation materials
provided by the speaker and additional resources developed by Amorit Education
to aid your teams in post-session implementation.
Who
will benefit?
This
webinar is designed for professionals responsible for developing,
administering, or overseeing employee leave policies and ensuring compliance
with state and local paid sick leave requirements. It will be especially
valuable for those who manage HR policy decisions, employee handbook updates,
payroll administration, and multi-state compliance obligations—those include:
- HR
Directors
- Vice
Presidents of Human Resources
- Human
Resources Managers
- Employee
Relations Managers
- HR
Compliance Managers
- HR
Policy Managers
- Benefits
Managers
- Leave
of Absence Administrators
- Payroll
Directors
- Payroll
Managers
- Payroll
Compliance Specialists
- Compensation
and Benefits Managers
- Workforce
Compliance Managers
- Labor
& Employment Compliance Professionals
- Employee
Handbook Administrators
- Multi-State
HR Compliance Specialists
- Corporate
HR Business Partners
- Employment Law Compliance Advisors
Bob McKenzie, has over 40 years of human resources management experience. His background includes a wide range of hands-on experience in all areas of Human resources management in all types of industries within the public and private sectors.
Bob has been cited in a number of Human Resources trade publications. Among them are HR.com, HR Magazine, HR Florida Review, Vault.com, BNA and the Institute of Management and Administration and the Business Journal. He has been a speaker at a number of conferences as well as audio and web-based seminars.
Bob is a graduate of Rider University where he received a Bachelor of Science in Commerce Degree and double majored in Industrial Relations and Organizational Behavior.
Enrollment Options
Tags: mandatory paid sick leave, paid sick leave webinar, paid leave compliance, multi-state HR compliance, PTO policy design, sick leave laws, leave policy webinar, payroll compliance, HR compliance training, employee handbook updates, federal contractor compliance, state leave law updates, bob mckenzie, march 2026, webinar

