Waseca County on Dec. 2 approved a package of updated personnel policies that include a new Minnesota Paid Leave (MNPL) policy designed to comply with the state's Jan. 1, 2026 implementation date.
HR staff told commissioners the county would not enroll in the state's public plan but would contract with a private administrator to manage benefits and compliance; staff cited a two-year rate lock to insulate the county from early state-rate volatility. The package also included updates to recruitment, probation and reinstatement provisions.
Commissioners debated several points in the personnel package. One line of discussion focused on reinstatement and service-credit windows for employees who return after separation; commissioners proposed shortening a proposed 12-month reinstatement window and aligning internal hiring-file retention timelines. Another theme was concern about the administrative complexity and potential cost of the new paid-leave program; one commissioner said the mandate will impose burdens on local employers and the community.
HR staff said reinstatement provisions are a recruitment tool and do not eliminate standard hiring or interview processes; reinstated employees would still be subject to department head and HR approval and could be required to serve a probationary period. The board voted to adopt the personnel policy bundle, including MNPL language, after discussion. The meeting record shows some commissioners opposed the MNPL or expressed strong reservations, but the resolution passed by recorded vote.