Just another FMLA question...
nohr4u1yr
218 Posts
Please read below - this is an email I received from one of my employees. Would you grant it? What documentation (if any) do I need to validate her as the caregiver. (I know you can have more than one FMLA case at a time)
"The last two weeks I have missed time from work due to my grandmother being sick and having surgery. The question that I have for you is can I have two FMLA cases or not because I'm her primary caretaker and she lives with me. Right now I'm covered due to my daughter's illness, but I wasn't sure if you could have two cases. Will you let me know."
"The last two weeks I have missed time from work due to my grandmother being sick and having surgery. The question that I have for you is can I have two FMLA cases or not because I'm her primary caretaker and she lives with me. Right now I'm covered due to my daughter's illness, but I wasn't sure if you could have two cases. Will you let me know."
Comments
But, grandparents are not covered in the language of The Act. In fact, the specific language limits an employee to absence essential "...to care for the employee's spouse, son, daughter, or parent with
a serious health condition". Even though this employee is the 'caregiver' for the grandmother, it's not covered in The Act.
I would get the documentation for both and I would consider to let them run concurrent. In no way would I consider to let them run the course for greater than a total of 12 weeks. If the wonderful caregiving goes beyon the 12 weeks, then we would seperate our employer/employee relationship and terminate the employment.
I bet this person is looking to extent the 12 weeks by having one run the course and be protected while the other runs its course.
PORK
Still, the 12 week limit applies to all cases during your year, just as both have stated.
geno
1) ...a child of a person standing in loco parentis, who is either under age 18, or incapable of self care because of a disability.
or
2) ....include those with day-to-day responsibilities to care for and financially support a child or who had such responsibility for the employee when the employee was a child.
If it includes grandparent, the act doesn't mention it and goes to great length, it would seem, to restrict it solely to a child.
I could of course be wrong, but the FMLA doesn't seem to contain language opening it up to caring for assorted types or relatives or others for whom daily care is being given.