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HB 1599

Certain end-of-course Standards of Learning assessments; elimination and replacement.

2025 Regular Session Introduced by Josh Cole

ND state employees can donate and use donated leave to help colleagues with pregnancy or serious illness, under an OMB HR program with medical verification.

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Bill Summary · HB 1599

Summary — HB 1599 (North Dakota): State leave sharing program for state employees

Status & key dates
- Introduced: December 12, 2024
- Committee action: Reported/adopted by Government & Veterans Affairs Committee (Jan 30, 2025)
- Floor votes (enrollment): House 92–0; Senate 45–1
- Filed with Secretary of State: March 27, 2025
- Citation amended: Section 54-06-14.7, North Dakota Century Code

Purpose / intent
- To create (and require the Office of Management and Budget’s human resource management services division to establish) a statewide leave‑sharing program that lets permanent state employees donate accrued annual and sick leave to co‑workers who lack available leave because of pregnancy or a severe, extreme, or life‑threatening medical condition, or because they are caring for an immediate relative or household member with such a condition.

Major provisions / changes
- Program establishment: The human resource management services division must set up a state leave sharing program and a mechanism for leave donations and use.
- Eligible recipients: Permanent state employees who are pregnant or who are suffering from a severe, extreme, or life‑threatening condition, or who are caring for an immediate relative or household member with such a condition.
- Ineligible employees: Temporary employees and contracted employees with limited‑term appointments may not participate.
- Usage limit: A recipient may not use more than four months of donated leave in any 12‑month period.
- Retention rule: Employees may not retain donated leave beyond the occurrence that necessitated the leave.
- Medical verification: Program participation requires medical certification from an authorized clinician — physician, physician assistant, psychologist, or advanced practice nurse practitioner — verifying the condition’s severity and expected duration.
- Administration and rules: The human resource management services division must track leave usage and adopt implementing rules in accordance with Chapter 28‑32 (administrative rulemaking).
- Retroactivity: The statute carries a parenthetical note indicating retroactive application (see statute note).

Who is affected
- Directly affected: Permanent North Dakota state employees (both donors and recipients), and the human resource management services division of OMB (program administrator).
- Excluded: Temporary and limited‑term contract employees.
- Indirectly affected: State agencies that must accommodate donated leave, payroll/HR systems (for tracking and processing donated leave), and clinicians providing certifications.

Procedural/implementation notes
- The division must adopt formal administrative rules (chapter 28‑32) and implement tracking mechanisms for donated leave.
- Agencies may need to revise leave policies, update payroll/HR processes, and train staff on the new program and medical‑certification requirements.
- The bill text includes a retroactive‑application note; check the statute’s notes for the specific retroactivity period and effective date used in practice.

Practical impact
- Provides an avenue to preserve income and employment for permanent state employees facing severe health situations or pregnancy when they exhaust their own leave balances.
- Administrative costs for program setup, tracking, and rulemaking will fall to the HR division and agencies; no fiscal estimates are included in the bill text supplied here.

Compiled from official sources — confirm details with the bill’s official record.

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