Nevada Code § 608.0198

Employee entitled to leave related to domestic violence or sexual assault; uses of leave; prohibited acts; required documentation; Labor Commissioner to prepare bulletin; posting; maintenance of records; other rights, remedies and agreements unimpaired
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1. An employee who has been employed by an
employer for at least 90 days and who is a victim of an act which constitutes
domestic violence or sexual assault, or whose family or household member is a
victim of an act which constitutes domestic violence or sexual assault, and the
employee is not the alleged perpetrator, is entitled to not more than 160 hours
of leave in one 12-month period. Hours of leave provided pursuant to this
subsection:
(a) May be paid or unpaid by the employer;
(b) Must be used within the 12 months immediately
following the date on which the act which constitutes domestic violence or
sexual assault occurred;
(c) May be used consecutively or intermittently;
and
(d) If used for a reason for which leave may also
be taken pursuant to the Family and Medical Leave Act of 1993, 29 U.S.C. 
2601 et seq., must be deducted from the amount of leave the employee is
entitled to take pursuant to this section and from the amount of leave the
employee is entitled to take pursuant to the Family and Medical Leave Act of
1993, 29 U.S.C. 2601 et seq.
2. An employee may use the hours of leave
pursuant to subsection 1 as follows:
(a) An employee may use the hours of leave only:
(1) For the diagnosis, care or treatment
of a health condition related to an act which constitutes domestic violence or
sexual assault committed against the employee or family or household member of
the employee;
(2) To obtain counseling or assistance
related to an act which constitutes domestic violence or sexual assault
committed against the employee or family or household member of the employee;
(3) To participate in any court
proceedings related to an act which constitutes domestic violence or sexual
assault committed against the employee or family or household member of the
employee; or
(4) To establish a safety plan, including,
without limitation, any action to increase the safety of the employee or the
family or household member of the employee from a future act which constitutes
domestic violence or sexual assault.
(b) After taking any hours of leave upon the occurrence
of the act which constitutes domestic violence or sexual assault, an employee
shall give not less than 48 hours advance notice to his or her employer of the
need to use additional hours of leave for any purpose listed in paragraph (a).
3. An employer shall not:
(a) Deny an employee the right to use hours of
leave in accordance with the conditions of this section;
(b) Require an employee to find a replacement
worker as a condition of using hours of leave; or
(c) Retaliate against an employee for using hours
of leave.
4. The employer of an employee who takes
hours of leave pursuant to this section may require the employee to provide to
the employer documentation that confirms or supports the reason the employee
provided for requesting leave. Such documentation may include, without
limitation, a police report, a copy of an application for an order for
protection, an affidavit from an organization which provides services to
victims of domestic violence or sexual assault or documentation from a physician.
Any documentation provided to an employer pursuant to this subsection is
confidential and must be retained by the employer in a manner consistent with
the requirements of the Family and Medical Leave Act of 1993, 29 U.S.C. 2601
et seq.
5. The Labor Commissioner shall prepare a
bulletin which clearly sets forth the right to the benefits created by this
section. The Labor Commissioner shall post the bulletin on the Internet website
maintained by the Office of Labor Commissioner, if any, and shall require all
employers to post the bulletin in a conspicuous location in each workplace
maintained by the employer. The bulletin may be included in any printed
abstract posted by the employer pursuant to NRS
608.013 .
6. An employer shall maintain a record of
the hours of leave taken pursuant to this section for each employee for a
2-year period following the entry of such information in the record and, upon
request, shall make those records available for inspection by the Labor
Commissioner. The employer shall exclude the names of the employees from the
records, unless a request for a record is for the purpose of an investigation.
7. The provisions of this section do not:
(a) Limit or abridge any other rights, remedies
or procedures available under the law.
(b) Negate any other rights, remedies or
procedures available to an aggrieved party.
(c) Prohibit, preempt or discourage any contract
or other agreement that provides a more generous leave benefit or paid leave
benefit.
8. As used in this section:
(a) Domestic violence has the meaning ascribed
to it in NRS 33.018 .
(b) Family or household member means a:
(1) Spouse;
(2) Domestic partner;
(3) Minor child; or
(4) Parent or other adult person who is
related within the first degree of consanguinity or affinity to the employee,
or other adult person who is or was actually residing with the employee at the
time of the act which constitutes domestic violence or sexual assault.
(c) Sexual assault has the meaning ascribed to
it in NRS 200.366 .

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