Automate your leave and accommodations processes across multiple industries and administrative offices.
In education, the pressure on leave of absence and job accommodations management is rising because employee absence has a direct effect on the institution’s core mission: continuity of instruction, student support, and campus operations. In K–12, even one leave case can trigger substitute coverage issues, classroom disruption, special education service gaps, and added strain on principals and HR. In higher education, the challenge is different but equally complex: institutions often have decentralized structures, varied employee groups, faculty and staff with very different job models, and local decision-making spread across departments, schools, and campuses. Those operating realities make each leave or accommodation case harder to manage consistently. Reports from educator organizations continue to show persistent overwork, burnout, and staffing strain in education, which helps explain why these cases are not easing.
What makes education distinct is that leave and accommodations decisions are rarely just an HR transaction. They often affect classroom coverage, student-facing services, academic schedules, testing support, transportation, research continuity, and union or departmental relationships. That means HR is not simply tracking time away from work. It is coordinating around service continuity in environments where staffing flexibility is often limited and where decisions are highly visible to managers, employees, and sometimes families or students.
The compliance burden is also becoming more layered. K–12 districts and colleges must manage FMLA, ADA, pregnancy-related accommodations under the PWFA, state leave requirements, internal policy, and in many cases collectively bargained rules or academic employment structures. EEOC guidance under the PWFA makes clear that covered employers must provide reasonable accommodations absent undue hardship and cannot force an employee to take leave if another effective accommodation would allow the employee to keep working That raises the stakes for documentation, individualized review, and process consistency.

