Can I terminate?
bgrimes
45 Posts
I have an employee that experienced a work comp less than a year ago. The incident involved him literally catching on fire from head to toe. It may be a miracle but he recovered very well. No scars or anything on the outside. He has some family problems going on at home and his attendance has been affected due to the fact that he is attending counseling sessions with his wife. He also has informed us that because of his accident with the fire, he has a fear of flame, and no longer wants to work in a capacity where he has to be around flames from cutting torches, welders and the like. Every job in our shop requires the use of welders and torch cutters. His productivity has suffered a loss due to both these problems (his fear and his domestic situation). So now we have an attendance problem (due to the spouses counseling)a productivity problem (due to his fear & home situation). He is becoming a whiner. We don't know what to do with him....do we have to worry about an ADA infraction because of the fear?
Bottom line is this: We would like to dismiss him, but are afraid to. What do you suggest?
Bottom line is this: We would like to dismiss him, but are afraid to. What do you suggest?
Comments
I would not be so quick to say he does not have a disability. I once handled a case where the employee, a Chicago Depertment of Transportation worker, claimed he could not go out on snow calls because he had "snow phobia" and the judge bought it as a real fear that disabled him. Bottom line, go through your ADA analysis and if he has a diagnosis from a doctor that he has a real phobia, go through your ADA accommodation analysis and see whether you can reasonably accommodate him without an undue hardship. You really don't want this guy in front of a jury talking about how he was burned from head to toe on the job, and his mean and nasty employer didn't take his subsequent fear of fire seriously.
Have you considered an unpaid leave of absence (with a defined limit) until his personal issues are resolved? Obviously, if there are union issues, you have different problems.
This is a very difficult situation for your company. I hope you can resolve this soon.
You might have to pay unemployment, too. And he might be eligible for FMLA leave for his emotional problems.
You might want to talk to a Missouri lawyer.
[url]http://www.hrhero.com/findanattorney.shtml[/url]
Good luck.
James Sokolowski
Senior Editor
M. Lee Smith Publishers
I would like to add one point. AWilliams hit things pretty well on the head with his comments. You can be legally right-- and it can still cost you dearly. If the employee were to sue you, unless you were able to get summary judgement from the judge, you are probably going to lose. What jury isn't going to side with this guy? I would see if there was anything I could do to find something else in the company he can do. Surely you have some positions, somewhere, that do not involve welding activities. Do you have delivery? Or could he qualify for some sort of receiving job? I'm not sure what you have, but if there was a way to accomodate him slightly, without it being an excessive burden on the company, I might consider doing so.