23 Miss. Code. R. 104-9.1 - Sick Pay
A. These payments
are defined as follows:
1. Sick pay is a
payment made to or on behalf of an employee by an employer or a private third
party (such as a union or insurance company) for sickness or accident
disability. Sick pay is either wages or unearned income.
2. Payments under a Workers' Compensation law
are neither wages nor sick pay. Annual and sick leave payments are considered a
continuation of salary.
B. These payments are treated as follows:
1. When sick pay is received within 6 months
after stopping work, and it is not attributable to the employee's own
contributions through payroll deduction to a sick pay plan, treat as earned
income.
2. When sick pay is
received within 6 months of stopping work, and it is attributable to the
employee's own contributions through payroll deduction to a sick pay plan,
treat any portion of the sick pay received by the employee which, according to
the employer is attributable to the employee's own contributions, as unearned
income.
3. When sick pay is
received more than 6 months after stopping work, treat as unearned income.
a) To determine the 6-month period after
stopping work:
1) Begin with the first day of
non-work.
2) Include the remainder
of the calendar month in which work stops.
3) Include the next 6 full calendar
months.
b) Example: If
an individual stops work on May 5, the 6-month periods ends November
30th.
State regulations are updated quarterly; we currently have two versions available. Below is a comparison between our most recent version and the prior quarterly release. More comparison features will be added as we have more versions to compare.
No prior version found.