Who gets the FMLA, if anyone?
Whatever
1,945 Posts
The following letter was received by our NJ plant manager from an employee requesting an extension of a leave due to the death of the mother "...After that I have been in charge of my family preparing the funeral and taking care of my family and my father. My father is not in a stable condition due to my mother's death...."
The following letter was received by our NY plant manager from an employee requesting an extension of a leave due to the death of the mother "...After that I have been in charge of my family preparing the funeral and taking care of my family and my father. My father is not in a stable condition due to my mother's death...."
The notes from the father's doctor are also extremely similar in language (matter of fact both forms state that the ee is so much closer to their parent than the other siblings, that if they were not there, the parent's emotional state would deteriorate)
Finally, the two employees are sisters.
So is either one or neither one or both employees entitled to an FMLA?
The following letter was received by our NY plant manager from an employee requesting an extension of a leave due to the death of the mother "...After that I have been in charge of my family preparing the funeral and taking care of my family and my father. My father is not in a stable condition due to my mother's death...."
The notes from the father's doctor are also extremely similar in language (matter of fact both forms state that the ee is so much closer to their parent than the other siblings, that if they were not there, the parent's emotional state would deteriorate)
Finally, the two employees are sisters.
So is either one or neither one or both employees entitled to an FMLA?
Comments
You are at liberty to deny them both and then see what they come back with. You must state a reason for your denial. I would say, "The two requests for leave and the accompanying medical certifications are unclear and vague and contain either the same or similar language, and, as such, the validity of each is brought into question. Upon receipt of additional information, the request will be reconsidered." The Act allows you to ask, and your form probably states, "State what care you will provide or what service you will render the family member."
Am I to assume that sister A wants 12 weeks, to be followed by 12 weeks with sister B?