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A RESOLUTION
26-87
IN THE COUNCIL OF THE DISTRICT OF COLUMBIA
April 1, 2025
To declare the existence of an emergency with respect to the need to amend the Universal Paid
Leave Amendment Act of 2016 to prohibit the reduction of private market short-term
disability benefits based on actual or estimated paid leave benefits to which an eligible
individual may be entitled to from the District, regardless of in which jurisdiction the
policy was issued or written; and to amend the Insurance Trade and Economic
Development Amendment Act of 2000 to make the prohibition of offsetting or reducing
benefits under a private market short-term disability insurance policy based on estimated
or actual benefits received under the Universal Paid Leave Amendment Act of 2016
enforceable under that law, regardless of the jurisdiction in which the insurance policy
was issued or written.
RESOLVED, BY THE COUNCIL OF THE DISTRICT OF COLUMBIA, That this
resolution may be cited as the “Short-Term Disability Insurance Benefit Protection Clarification
Emergency Declaration Resolution of 2025”.
Sec. 2. (a) There exists an immediate need to extend the provisions within the Short-Term
Disability Insurance Benefit Protection Clarification Temporary Amendment Act of 2024,
effective September 18, 2024 (D.C. Law 25-215; 71 DCR 9953), which will expire on May 1,
2025, to protect benefits from the District’s Universal Paid Leave (“UPL”) program and benefit
payments from short-term disability insurance plans for District workers who are entitled to both.
(b) Many District employers provide optional, private short-term disability insurance
plans as part of the compensation package paid and available to employees. These plans provide
enrolled employees with partial income replacement for the employee’s absence from work due
to recovery from injury or illness, including postpartum recovery. A typical short-term disability
plan provides between 40 and 60% of the employee’s salary up to a duration of between 3 to 6
months, based on documented medical need. Some employers pay the premiums for these plans,
while many employers require employees to pay all or part of the premiums.
(c) The District’s UPL program launched in July 2020. It provides benefits, in the form of
partial wage replacement, to District workers who need to take time off from work for events
associated with the birth or placement of a new child, including bonding (“parental leave”),
recovery from serious illness or injury (“medical leave”), or caring for a family member with a
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serious illness or injury (“family leave”). District employers pay quarterly contributions into a
social insurance fund from which benefits are paid to eligible workers when a qualifying leave
event arises.
(d) The UPL program provides up to 12 total weeks of benefits for parental leave,
medical leave, and family leave.
(e) Many District workers use the public and private programs together, relying on them
to achieve closer to full wage replacement in total and to extend the period of wage replacement
to more fully cover unpaid periods of leave from work necessitated by sometimes complex and
lengthy medical needs.
(f) In 2021, the Council learned that, since the UPL program began paying benefits to
workers, private insurance companies providing coverage to District workers were offsetting the
amount of benefits paid under their short-term disability plans by the amount of benefits the
employee was expected to receive from the District’s UPL program, regardless of whether the
beneficiary had applied for or received those paid leave benefits or not, and regardless of the
purpose for which the leave was used (i.e., parental bonding leave rather than medical leave).
(g) In Council Period 24, the Committee on Labor and Workforce Development (“Labor
Committee”) worked to partially close this coordination of benefits loophole to prohibit benefit
offsetting by including amendments to the Universal Paid Leave Act of 2016, effective April 7,
2017 (D.C. Law 21-264; D.C. Official Code § 32-541.01 et seq.), in the Fiscal Year 2022 Budget
Support Act of 2021, effective November 13, 2021 (D.C. Law 24-45; 68 DCR 10163).
(h) It later came to the attention of the Labor Committee that the Department of
Insurance, Securities, and Banking’s (“DISB”) ability to enforce the anti-offsetting law, as
intended, was hampered by the fact that the agency’s enforcement authority is typically limited
to insurance policies that were written or issued in the District. Thus, DISB was likely unable to
take enforcement action against an insurer for unlawfully offsetting UPL benefits for District-
based employees because the employer’s short-term disability policy was written or delivered
outside the District.
(i) Some employers of District employees—such as national employers or those based in
other states—may purchase a policy that was written or delivered outside the District. It was
previously reported to the Labor Committee that several insurance companies do not believe
their short-term disability benefit is protected by the District’s anti-offsetting provision and
Council offices continue to hear reports of District workers being victims of offsetting practices.
(j) The Council did not intend for UPL benefits to reduce or limit workers’ access to
short-term disability benefits as:
(1) The UPL law states that the right to UPL benefits is not to be diminished by a
collective bargaining agreement, by any other contract, or by an employer policy;
(2) The law enumerates 2 programs, unemployment insurance and long-term
disability insurance, that, if an individual is receiving benefits under those programs, will make
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the individual ineligible for UPL benefits, implying that individuals are permitted to receive
benefits under other programs like short-term disability;
(3) The law states that the UPL benefits shall not prevent an employer from
supplementing or providing greater benefits than required under the UPL law;
(4) Individual workers often use the programs for different purposes, such as UPL
for bonding leave and short-term disability for postpartum recovery which are subject to
different time restrictions; and
(5) The UPL program and short-term disability insurance have completely
separate and independent funding mechanisms.
(k) Under the UPL law, it is unlawful for any person to interfere with an employee’s right
to UPL. Using the UPL benefits as an offset for short-term disability benefits renders the UPL
benefit meaningless because an employee receives no more benefit than they would in the
absence of UPL; that is interference.
(l) The intent of this legislation is to continue to strengthen DISB’s enforcement authority
to prevent interference by including an extraterritoriality clause that requires application of the
law regardless of the jurisdiction in which the private market short-term disability insurance
policy was written or issued.
(m) The current temporary measure will expire on May 1, 2025, and action must be taken
to enact a new round of emergency and temporary legislation while passage of the permanent bill
is pending in the current Council period.
Sec. 3. The Council of the District of Columbia determines that the circumstances
enumerated in section 2 constitute emergency circumstances making it necessary that the Short-
Term Disability Insurance Benefit Protection Clarification Emergency Amendment Act of 2025
be adopted after a single reading.
Sec. 4. This resolution shall take effect immediately.