Rice University Policy No.
204-03
FACULTY FAMILY, PRIMARY
CAREGIVER, MEDICAL, AND PROFESSIONAL LEAVE
APPLIES TO ALL RICE UNIVERSITY TENURED AND TENURE-TRACK
FACULTY
FAMILY LEAVES
Family leave under the Family and Medical Leave Act for faculty may
be granted for a period of up to 12 weeks during any annual period
of employment from July 1 through June 30. Family leave is unpaid
leave and is granted upon request with appropriate documentation
for birth of a child of the faculty member, the placement of a
child with the faculty member for adoption or foster care, in order
to care for a spouse, child, domestic partner or parent with a
serious health condition, and the extension of a medical leave in
which case the 12-week limit may be applied to the entire period of
absence.
A faculty member using family leave may return to his or her
position held before the leave was taken or be placed in an
equivalent position with the same benefits, pay, and other terms
and conditions of employment. Any benefits approved prior to the
leave are not forfeited. Any paid leave under this policy that also
qualifies as family leave shall count toward the 12-week annual
family leave allotment. If the husband and wife or both domestic
partners are employed by the University and both eligible for
family leave due to birth of a child, the placement of a child with
the individuals for adoption or foster care, or in order to care
for a parent with a serious health condition, the two individuals
are limited to a combined total of 12 weeks of family leave during
each annual period.
PRIMARY CAREGIVER LEAVES
The primary caregiver leave policy covers full-time
benefit-eligible faculty members in the following categories: 1)
birth parent; 2) adoptive parent of a child under the age of one
year; 3) spouse or domestic partner of birth parent. A full-time
faculty member in one of these categories, and who is also the
child's primary caregiver, will be entitled to one full semester
leave at full pay. During this semester, the faculty member will be
free of teaching, research, and administrative responsibilities.
The semester covered by this leave will be chosen at the discretion
of the faculty member, as long as it is completed within 9 months
after birth or adoption. There shall be only one primary caregiver
leave entitlement per child and it may not be divided.
The primary caregiver is the person in the household who has
primary responsibility in terms of time and commitment for the
active care, custody and welfare of the child. A faculty member
applying for primary caregiver leave must complete a signed and
notarized affidavit with University Human Resources certifying that
he or she is the primary caregiver and supply supporting
documentation if requested.
Upon written request to the Provost, the tenure clock and contract
terms of a faculty member who has taken a primary caregiver leave
while holding an appointment without tenure will be extended by one
year. The maximum number of extensions an untenured faculty member
may receive for primary caregiver leave is two.
A faculty member planning to take a primary caregiver leave under
this plan should inform his or her Department Chair and Dean in
writing (with a copy to the Provost), ordinarily at least three
months before the expected start of the leave and in all cases no
later than 30 days before the start of the leave. Failure to
provide timely notice may result in a denial of the primary
caregiver leave. Faculty members covered by outside grants or
contracts during the period of the primary caregiver leave will
normally arrange no-cost extensions of grants where possible. If a
faculty member does not wish to be released from the obligations of
a grant or contract, the faculty member may nonetheless be relieved
from other administrative or teaching duties in conformity with the
primary caregiver leave policy.
MEDICAL LEAVES
Faculty members who are benefits-eligible may request personal
medical leaves for any medical reason, including pregnancy, for any
period of time that the faculty member is unable to work as
determined by his or her physician. The faculty member or
Department Chair may request such a leave. The leave request with
appropriate documentation, including a physician's statement,
should be processed through the Department Chair, the Dean of the
academic division, and the Provost for approval, and to the
Director of Human Resources for processing.
In the case of pregnancy and childbirth, if the birth parent is
also the child's primary caregiver, the faculty member will also be
eligible for the primary caregiver leave (see above).
Faculty on medical leave, including pregnancy and childbirth not
covered by primary caregiver leave, may receive up to 50 percent of
their academic year salary based on the length of their leave,
after which continuing disability payment at partial salary may be
requested and approved under the University's long-term disability
insurance program. Faculty are expected to apply through their
departments to Human Resources for short-term disability leave
benefits, where appropriate, to pay for salary continuation.
TEACHING ASSIGNMENTS AFFECTED BY FAMILY, PRIMARY CAREGIVER,
AND MEDICAL LEAVES
While faculty seeking primary caregiver leave are expected to
provide adequate notice to the Department Chair and the Dean prior
to the expected start of the leave, faculty approved for primary
caregiver leave will not be responsible for finding replacements
for courses they normally teach, nor will they be required
subsequently to compensate for teaching release granted as part of
the primary caregiver leave. Faculty will be expected to cooperate
fully with the Department Chair and Dean to identify ways to meet
curricular and departmental needs and issues that may arise due to
the primary caregiver leave.
Faculty on extended family or medical leaves during the academic
semester will attempt to work out suitable alternative ways to
complete their teaching assignments with Department Chairs and with
the approval of the appropriate Dean. If it is anticipated that
family or medical leaves will be sufficiently long that students
will be unable to complete the courses offered by the faculty
member on leave, a Department Chair may decide to relieve the
faculty member from teaching for an entire semester and find
acceptable substitutes. If a faculty member on extended family or
medical leave who has been relieved from teaching is able to return
to work full time during a semester, the Department Chair may
assign other duties to compensate for the lack of teaching duties;
if the faculty member prefers not to assume such duties, the
Department Chair may recommend an adjustment of the faculty
member's salary.
EXTENSION OF CONTRACT AFFECTED BY FAMILY, PRIMARY
CAREGIVER, AND MEDICAL LEAVES
Upon written request to the Provost, the contract terms and tenure
clock of a full-time faculty member who has taken a primary
caregiver leave while holding an appointment without tenure will be
extended by one year. The maximum number of extensions an untenured
faculty member may receive for primary caregiver leave is two. The
contract of a faculty member who has taken a significant medical or
family leave of fewer than 120 days during a summer or semester
will be extended for one semester for each such leave, for a
maximum extension of one year per contract. Upon written request to
the Provost, the contract and tenure clock of a faculty member who
has taken a significant medical or family leave of 120 days or more
in any twelve-month period will be extended by one year.
Primary caregiver and significant medical or family leaves will not
count as service periods for sabbatical purposes.
A faculty member who is eligible to request primary caregiver,
family, or medical leave but elects not to do so, may, at the time
he or she is eligible for the leave, request a contract extension
equivalent to that which the leave would provide. The extension
will not be granted retroactively; it must be requested and
approved at the time of the primary caregiver, family, or medical
leave.
A combination of contract extensions and renewals will have the
effect of extending the 8-year limitation on service at the rank of
assistant professor.
PROFESSIONAL LEAVES
Professional leaves for faculty with or without salary are
determined by
University Policy 208
. Leave periods with or without salary do not count toward a
sabbatical. However, a leave of absence without salary with the
continuation of normal research activity as covered in University
Policy 201-03 does count in the 8-year limitation on service at the
rank of assistant professor. Professional Leave with or without
salary will not extend the maximum time for reaching tenure of 8
years from the date of initial employment.
Policy No. 204
Issued: June 23, 1993
Revised: September 1, 1996
Revised: September 9, 1997
Revised: February 11, 2003