New Mexico servicemembers have powerful federal protections under USERRA — guaranteed reemployment after military service, no discrimination, continued benefits, and same job back.
Published May 9, 2026
## USERRA + military leave in New Mexico
**USERRA** (Uniformed Services Employment and Reemployment Rights Act, 1994) is the federal law protecting military servicemembers' civilian jobs. New Mexico servicemembers have strong protections during AND after military service.
## Coverage
**Who's protected:**
- Active duty military (Army, Navy, Air Force, Marines, Coast Guard, Space Force)
- Reserves
- National Guard (during federal service)
- Public Health Service commissioned corps
- NOAA commissioned corps
- Some intermittent disaster-response personnel
**Who's covered as employer:**
- All employers (no minimum size)
- Federal, state, local government
- Private employers
- Successor employers (after sale)
**${s.name} also has state law:**
- Often parallel federal protections
- Sometimes broader
- Specific ${s.name} provisions
## What USERRA requires
**Five key protections:**
**1. Right to military leave:**
- Up to 5 years cumulative military service
- Some service excluded (training, etc.)
- Voluntary or involuntary
- Federal active duty also generally exempt from 5-year limit
**2. Right to reemployment:**
- Same job back (escalator principle)
- Or comparable position
- Same status, seniority, pay rate
- As if continuously employed
**3. No discrimination:**
- Cannot deny employment because of military service
- Cannot fire / demote because of military service
- Cannot deny promotion / training
- Cannot retaliate for asserting rights
**4. Continued benefits:**
- Health insurance continuation (TRICARE alternative)
- Pension accrual continues
- Vacation accrual (per employer policy)
- Other benefits maintained
**5. Specific protections post-return:**
- Cannot terminate within specific period without cause
- 1 year for service over 180 days
- 180 days for service 31-180 days
- For-cause termination still allowed
## Pre-service notification
**Servicemember must:**
- Give advance notice (when feasible)
- Verbal sufficient (no specific form)
- No specific timing ("as much advance as possible")
- Some emergency exceptions
**Employer cannot require:**
- Specific notice format
- Specific time period
- Use of particular leave type (vacation, etc.)
- Counseling about military participation
## During military service
**Employer continues:**
- Pension contributions / accruals
- Health insurance (servicemember can elect to continue or use TRICARE)
- Service credit for promotions / seniority
- Vacation / PTO accrual (if employer policy)
**Employer cannot:**
- Terminate servicemember
- Reduce benefits
- Reassign permanently
- Refuse to allow leave
- Penalize for service
## Returning to work
**Servicemember must:**
- Be released from service under honorable conditions
- Apply for reinstatement within deadlines:
- 1 day for service under 31 days
- 14 days for service 31-180 days
- 90 days for service over 180 days
- Time tolled by hospitalization
**Employer must:**
- Reemploy promptly
- Same position OR comparable
- Same seniority + status + pay
- Make-up training as needed
- Restore benefits
- Honor escalator principle (promotions that would have happened)
## The "escalator principle"
**Critical concept:**
- Servicemember treated as if never left
- Promotions that would have happened apply
- Pay raises applied
- Seniority unbroken
- Even if specific position eliminated
**Example:**
- Servicemember left at job X
- During service, X eliminated, but Y created
- Servicemember would have moved to Y
- Servicemember reinstated to Y
## Exceptions to reemployment
**Employer NOT required to reemploy if:**
1. **Impossible / unreasonable** — circumstances changed making impossible
2. **Servicemember can't perform** — disability + can't be accommodated
3. **Bad-faith hiring** — temporary employment specifically to avoid USERRA
4. **Felony or other-than-honorable discharge** — disqualifying
**Strict standards — most employers must reemploy.**
## Health insurance
**During service:**
- COBRA-like continuation 24+ months
- Servicemember pays full premium
- May choose TRICARE instead (often free)
- Specific procedures
**Upon return:**
- Immediate reinstatement
- No waiting periods
- No pre-existing condition exclusions
- Same coverage as before
## Pension / 401(k) protection
**During service:**
- Treated as continued service
- Vesting continues
- No break in service
**Upon return:**
- Right to make up missed contributions
- Up to 3 times normal contribution period
- Employer matching restored
- Significant retirement protection
## Filing complaints
**USERRA complaints:**
**1. VETS (Veterans' Employment and Training Service):**
- DOL agency
- Free + accessible
- Investigation + mediation
- Refer to DOJ if needed
**2. Direct lawsuit:**
- Federal court (private employers)
- Court of Federal Claims (federal employers)
- State court (some)
**3. State remedies:**
- ${s.name} parallel laws
- State labor agencies
## Damages
**USERRA remedies:**
- Lost wages + benefits
- Reinstatement
- Liquidated damages (for willful violations) — DOUBLE backpay
- Attorney's fees
- Pre-judgment interest
- Specific equitable relief
**No damages caps:**
- Unlike Title VII
- Full recovery available
- Liquidated damages strong incentive
## Common employer mistakes
- Refusing to reemploy
- Reemploying to lesser position
- Discriminating in hiring veterans
- Failing to maintain benefits
- Failing to apply escalator principle
- Punishing absences for military duties (drills, training)
- Counting military leave against PTO
- Background check questions about military service
## Common servicemember mistakes
- Not notifying employer
- Not applying for reinstatement timely
- Accepting lesser position without challenge
- Not documenting employer treatment
- Not knowing rights
- Settling without legal advice
## Special situations
**Federal employees:**
- Different procedures (CSRS / FERS)
- Department-specific
- Generally easier reemployment
**National Guard:**
- State active duty governed by state law
- Federal service (Title 10) covered by USERRA
- Title 32 service often covered too
- Most states have parallel state law
**Reserve drills + training:**
- 14 days for annual training
- 1 weekend / month drills
- Employer must accommodate
- Cannot count against vacation
**Disabled veterans:**
- Reasonable accommodation under USERRA
- Plus ADA protections
- Successor employer obligations
## ${s.name} state protections
**${s.name} likely has:**
- Parallel reemployment statute
- State military leave provisions
- ${s.name} National Guard protections
- Sometimes broader than USERRA
- Different procedures
## Practical tips for servicemembers
**Before service:**
- Notify employer in writing
- Get acknowledgment
- Document position + benefits
- Save offer letter / handbook
- Know your rights
**During service:**
- Keep employment records
- Maintain communication when feasible
- Keep employer updated on return date
- Document any benefits issues
**Upon return:**
- Apply for reinstatement promptly
- Document reinstatement (or refusal)
- Monitor escalator principle
- Watch for retaliation
- Consult attorney if issues
## What you should do
If you're a New Mexico servicemember facing employment issues: contact VETS hotline (1-866-487-2365) — free + effective. For complex cases, hire employment / military law attorney. Many New Mexico attorneys handle USERRA cases. Liquidated damages + attorney's fees create strong incentive for representation.
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*This guide is general information about federal + New Mexico law as of mid-2026 and is not legal advice. USERRA cases are technical. Talk to a licensed New Mexico employment attorney or VETS counselor about your specific situation.*
This guide is for general information only and does not constitute legal advice. Laws change and outcomes depend on your specific situation — talk to a licensed attorney before acting on anything you read here.