Home>Articles>California Democrats Push ‘Chosen Family’ Bereavement Leave – A Slippery Slope to Undefined Absurdity

California 'designated persons' in 'chosen family'. (Photo: Grok)

California Democrats Push ‘Chosen Family’ Bereavement Leave – A Slippery Slope to Undefined Absurdity

The employer must comply or face claims of unlawful employment practices

By J. Mitchell Sances, March 9, 2026 9:00 am

Sacramento Democrats are trying to redefine family to suit progressive ideology, and private sector California employers are about to pay the price. Senate Bill 1149, introduced February 18, 2026, by Sen. María Elena Durazo (D-Los Angeles), would force businesses to grant job-protected unpaid bereavement leave not just for actual relatives, but for anyone an employee suddenly decides to call “chosen family.”

The bill expands existing law under Government Code Section 12945.7, which already requires employers with five or more employees to provide up to five days of bereavement leave upon the death of a “family member.” Current statute defines that term narrowly: “Family member” means a spouse or a child, parent, sibling, grandparent, grandchild, domestic partner, or parent-in-law.

The new legislation amends the existing law by simply tacking on “or designated person”. These two words sound harmless, but upon reading the actual definition lawmakers imported from another piece of legislation, the California Family Rights Act, the ridiculous slippery slope becomes obvious.

The California Family Rights Act states: “‘Designated person’ means any individual related by blood or whose association with the employee is the equivalent of a family relationship. The designated person may be identified by the employee at the time the employee requests the leave.”

That’s it. No criteria. No verification process. No requirement that the relationship be long-standing, documented, or even reciprocal. The employee picks the person – at the moment they want the time off – and the employer must comply or face claims of unlawful employment practices under the same code sections. The law provides zero guardrails on who qualifies as “family” or when a worker can claim someone as such. Today it’s a close friend or roommate. Tomorrow it could be a neighbor, a workout buddy, or anyone else the employee feels like designating after the fact.

Employers already juggling staffing shortages will now navigate vague, self-serving claims with no meaningful way to push back without inviting lawsuits. The CFRA context limits a “designated person” to one per 12-month period for caregiving leave. However the new legislation’s bereavement expansion carries no such explicit restraint in its language, leaving the door wide open for repeated or expansive abuse.

Leading the charge to ram this through is Equality California, the state’s largest LGBTQ+ advocacy organization. The group proudly lists SB 1149 as a top priority in its 2026 legislative package, framing it as essential for “LGBTQ+ Families.” In its official announcement, Equality California declares: “Chosen family plays a central role in many LGBTQ+ people’s lives, particularly for those who have experienced family rejection or rely on community networks for support. While California law allows workers to take leave to care for chosen or extended family members, bereavement leave remains limited to immediate family. SB 1149 closes this gap by allowing workers to take bereavement leave for chosen and extended family members, ensuring they are not forced to choose between grieving a loved one and protecting their job.”

Equality California is not just cheering from the sidelines. It is a listed cosponsor alongside groups like Equal Rights Advocates and the California Work & Family Coalition. The message is clear: biological family is outdated; self-declared “chosen family” must now trigger the same legal protections.

California already leads the nation in workplace mandates that drive up costs and drive out businesses. This bill adds another layer of uncertainty and liability at a time when small employers can least afford it. When “family” can mean whatever an employee says it means on any given day, the term loses all meaning – and the burden shifts squarely onto the private sector.

SB 1149 has been referred to the Senate Committee on Labor, Public Employment and Retirement. One should expect the usual one-party steamroll as it is pushed through the state legislature to Governor Newsom’s desk and right down hardworking Californians’ throats. Californians watching their state hemorrhage jobs and sanity should pay close attention. This isn’t compassion; it is another step toward making every personal relationship a potential paid (or at least protected) excuse from work with zero accountability baked into the law.

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2 thoughts on “California Democrats Push ‘Chosen Family’ Bereavement Leave – A Slippery Slope to Undefined Absurdity

  1. Well, well, well. Let’s see how that works when someone in your “family” dies, and you can then request an exemption from Newscum’s illegal and immoral so-called “shared responsibility penalty” for not purchasing Obamacare in CA. Remember, he alone forced this through when the US gov. eliminated the penalty for not having Obamacare, Newscum right away put it back on for anyone living in CA that has the temerity not to participate in the Obamacare scam, you have to pay $1,000 penalty (per person!) on your CA income taxes. Now, thanks to this new law, they can’t penalize you when someone in your “family” dies and you can get an automatic exemption (you file for the exemption, but it’s automatic approval if someone in your family dies).

  2. SB 1149 is a NO. Seriously? What nonsense. Before you know it employers will have to provide paid bereavement leave if any employee loses their pet rat or a garden snail they “adopted.” Just stop!

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