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active duty, may take up to 12 weeks of leave for reasons related to or affected by the family <br />member's call-up or service. <br />The qualifying exigency must be one of the following: (1) short -notice deployment; (2) military <br />events and activities; (3) childcare and school activities; (3) financial and legal arrangements; (5) <br />counseling; (6) rest and recuperation; (7) post -deployment activities; (8) parental care; or (9) <br />additional activities that arise out of active duty, provided that the employer and employee agree, <br />including agreement on timing and duration of the leave. <br />Military Caregiver Leave: <br />An employee eligible for FMLA leave (as described above) who is the spouse, son, daughter, <br />parent, or next of kin of a covered servicemember may take up to 26 weeks in a single 12-month <br />period to care for that servicemember. <br />The family member must be a current member of the Armed Forces (including a member of the <br />National Guard or Reserves), who has a serious injury or illness incurred in the line of duty on <br />active duty for which he or shethey areas undergoing medical treatment, recuperation, or -therapy, <br />or otherwise is on outpatient status or on the temporary disability retired list. Eligible employees <br />may not take leave under this provision to care for former members of the Armed Forces, former <br />members of the National Guard and Reserves, or members on the permanent disability retired list. <br />DEFINITIONS <br />• A "son or daughter of a covered servicemember" means the covered servicemember's <br />biological, adopted, or foster child, stepchild, legal ward, or a child for whom the covered <br />servicemember stood in loco parentis, and who is of any age. <br />• A "parent of a covered servicemember" means a covered servicemember's biological, <br />adoptive, step, or foster father or mother, or any other individual who stood in loco parentis <br />to the covered servicemember. This term does not include parents "in law." <br />• The "next of kin of a covered servicemember" is the nearest blood relative, other than the <br />covered servicemember's spouse, parent, son, or daughter, in the following order of <br />priority: blood relatives who have been granted legal custody of the servicemember by <br />court decree or statutory provisions, brothers and sisters, grandparents, aunts and uncles, <br />and first cousins, unless the covered servicemember has specifically designated in writing <br />another blood relative as his -or -her -their nearest blood relative for purposes of military <br />caregiver leave under the FMLA. When no such designation is made, and there are multiple <br />family members with the same level of relationship to the covered servicemember, all such <br />family members shall be considered the covered servicemember's next of kin and may take <br />FMLA leave to provide care to the covered servicemember, either consecutively or <br />simultaneously. When such designation has been made, the designated individual shall be <br />deemed to be the covered servicemember's only next of kin. <br />• "Covered active duty" means: <br />o "Covered active duty" for members of a regular component of the Armed Forces means <br />duty during deployment of the member with the Armed Forces to a foreign country. <br />o "Covered active duty" for members of the reserve components of the Armed Forces <br />(members of the U.S. National Guard and Reserves) means duty during deployment of <br />the member with the Armed Forces to a foreign country under a call or order to active <br />duty in a contingency operation as defined in section 101(a)(13)(B) of Title 10 of the <br />United States Code. <br />• "Covered servicemember" means: <br />401Page <br />