1. Understanding Parental Leave Protections in New York
New York provides both job protection and paid leave benefits. Employees taking parental leave under the Paid Family Leave Law or Family and Medical Leave Act (FMLA) generally have the right to return to the same position or an equivalent role with equivalent pay, benefits, and terms of employment.
What Exactly Does Equivalent Position Mean under New York Law?
An equivalent position must offer substantially the same pay, benefits, hours, and location as the role held before leave commenced. Courts and the New York Department of Labor have held that an employer cannot use parental leave as a pretext to demote an employee, reduce compensation, or assign substantially different duties. If an employer claims the original position no longer exists due to restructuring, it must show that the restructuring occurred for legitimate business reasons independent of the employee's leave status, and that similarly situated employees in comparable positions were treated the same way. The burden falls on the employer to demonstrate that the change was not motivated by the employee's use of protected leave.
2. Layoffs and Restructuring during or after Parental Leave
Employers do have the right to conduct layoffs and reorganizations, even while employees are on parental leave. The legal issue arises when the timing or pattern suggests that the leave status influenced the decision.
Can an Employer Lay Me Off While I Am on Parental Leave in New York?
Yes, an employer may conduct a legitimate layoff during an employee's parental leave. However, the employer must follow the same notice, severance, and procedural requirements it would apply to any other employee. If a worker can show that the employer selectively targeted employees on parental leave, applied different layoff criteria to those employees, or failed to notify the employee of the layoff in a timely manner, a court may infer that leave status was a motivating factor. Documentation is critical here: employees should request written confirmation of any layoff decision, the business justification, and how the selection criteria were applied across the workforce.
What Happens If My Position Is Eliminated but Similar Roles Remain Unfilled in New York?
This pattern often signals potential discrimination. If an employer claims your position was eliminated due to restructuring, yet retains or creates similar roles for employees who did not take parental leave, courts may find that the elimination was pretextual. From a practitioner's perspective, the discrepancy between stated business reasons and actual staffing decisions is where many discrimination claims gain traction. Employees should document the existence of comparable open positions, the qualifications of other employees retained in similar roles, and any communications suggesting the employer viewed parental leave as a burden on operations.
3. Demotion, Reassignment, and Reduced Hours Upon Return
Some employers attempt to push employees out indirectly by downgrading positions, cutting hours, or reassigning duties upon return from leave.
Is Demotion or a Lower-Paying Role Legal after I Return from Parental Leave in New York?
No, unless the employer can demonstrate a legitimate, non-discriminatory business reason that is applied consistently across the workforce. Under the New York Human Rights Law and the Paid Family Leave Law, reassigning an employee to a materially lower position, reducing hours, or cutting compensation because of parental leave constitutes unlawful discrimination. The key is whether the change occurs because of the leave or for an independent reason. If an employee can show that the employer explicitly stated the position was being downgraded due to the time away, or if the timing and circumstances suggest retaliation, the employee may have a viable claim. Consider consulting New York Public Health Law resources if the reassignment affects workplace safety or compliance obligations.
4. Documenting Your Rights and Protecting Your Position
The strongest protection is a clear record made before and during leave.
What Documentation Should I Gather to Protect Myself before Returning from Parental Leave?
Obtain written confirmation from your employer of your return date, your position title, your salary, and any other material terms of employment before you depart on leave. Request this in writing and keep copies. Upon return, confirm in writing that you have resumed your original position with the same terms. If your employer proposes any changes, request the business justification in writing. If you are notified of a layoff or position elimination, ask for written notice of the effective date, the reason, and how the selection was made. Courts in New York frequently rely on contemporaneous written communications to determine whether leave status was a factor in an adverse decision. Employees should also maintain records of performance reviews, emails, and any statements by supervisors about the employee's value before and after leave, as inconsistency can suggest pretextual motivation.
| Documentation Type | Why It Matters |
| Return-to-work agreement (written) | Establishes the employer's commitment to your original position and terms |
| Performance reviews before leave | Shows your employment status and any prior concerns (or lack thereof) |
| Layoff notice or termination letter | Documents the stated reason and timing relative to your return |
| Emails or messages about restructuring | May reveal whether leave status was discussed as a factor |
| Comparable employee records | Demonstrates whether similar employees were treated differently |
In practice, Kings County Supreme Court and other New York trial courts have found discrimination claims viable when employees produce contemporaneous written evidence that contradicts the employer's stated reason for termination. A delayed or vague termination notice, combined with evidence that the employer knew the employee was returning, can shift the burden to the employer to explain its decision. Employees should formalize their concerns in writing before a final adverse decision is made, creating a record that may prove crucial if the matter proceeds to litigation or administrative review with the New York Department of Labor.
Moving forward, take three concrete steps: first, before your leave begins, secure written confirmation of your return terms and keep it accessible; second, document any changes to your role, hours, or compensation immediately upon return and request written explanations; third, if you learn of a layoff or restructuring affecting your position, gather all related communications and consult with counsel promptly, as notice and filing deadlines for discrimination claims in New York are strict and begin to run from the date of the adverse action.
28 Apr, 2026

