FMLA - Why am I on the fencepost on this one? HELP
nietra
134 Posts
Employee is requesting 2 days off to provide assitance to her mother who will be in the hospital becuase is having surgery for breast cancer.
Without knowing anything further what would you say?
Without knowing anything further what would you say?
Comments
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I guess I know the situation will turn into something more within the next few months and she will be using her 12 weeks later in the year.
I'm afraid that if we do count this and terminate after exactly 12 weeks that the court will say but those 2 days should not have counted because " ..." and come up with something either related to the 3 days or to not providing care since she is still in the hospital.
I want to err on our side, say no (we don't have an attendance policy so she will have no negative actions taken against her) and provide her with an additional 12 weeks later in the year.
If you do not give the leave, and it is FML, then you have stepped into it a bit.
Give the leave subject to medical certification paperwork being turned in. By the way, there is a whole nuther section to qualified leave besides just the 3 day rule - this could well qualify.
Read up on the eligibility piece and see what you think.
Here is one excerpt from the regs:
(a) For purposes of FMLA, ``serious health condition'' entitling an employee to FMLA leave means an illness, injury, impairment, or physical
or mental condition that involves:
(1) Inpatient care (i.e., an overnight stay) in a hospital, hospice, or residential medical care facility, including any period of incapacity
(for purposes of this section, defined to mean inability to work, attend school or perform other regular daily activities due to the serious
health condition, treatment therefor, or recovery therefrom), or any subsequent treatment in connection with such inpatient care; or
etc, etc.
Following the law is not about being 'cool'. It's about doing everything in your power to see that your policies and practices protect your business from legal challenge and monetary loss. Consistently, properly following the regs is your best path.
Disclaimer: This message is not intended to offend or attack. It is posted as personal opinion. If you find yourself offended or uncomfortable, email me and let me know why.
Our employees get annual training on FMLA and know what they are entitled for what circumstances however in this case she only asked for illness leave for two days. I learned elsewhere of the reason.
I have since sent the proper documentation to the employee and will discuss her future leave issues as being covered under FMLA with her when she returns.
Disclaimer: This message is not intended to offend or attack. It is posted as personal opinion. If you find yourself offended or uncomfortable, email me and let me know why.
We also have periodic training for employees at all levels. It's not the technical stuff HR handles, or tracking, but reminding employees (and supervisors) of the basics: what kinds of leave there are, to designate the leave as FMLA, to fill out the forms, what to do/where to send the physician's form, what is a serious health condition (in general), and what relatives qualify under family care leave.
To address the original question, our policy says any absence over 5 days needs to be reviewed as FMLA qualifying - unless we are informed of a surgery or other obviously qualifying condition. For the conditions you described, our practice is to allow supervisor discretion which generally means, is this someone who habitually abuses leave or are we in a crucial all-hands-on-deck situation? Since it sounds qualifying, as (marc?) said, they get the leave. In general, the supervisor would simply allow 2 days off, probably with pay as sick leave. Formal FMLA designation would come up if the absence is longer and if continuing care was going to be an issue.
Why over 5 days? The absence plus treatment section of a serious health condition is more than three days.
Attending to an immediate family member has no "out a certain day" requirement that I'm aware of. It's either FML or it's not.
Disclaimer: This message is not intended to offend or attack. It is posted as personal opinion. If you find yourself offended or uncomfortable, email me and let me know why.
You are correct on all counts. Our company policies for sick leave and FMLA (particularly sick leave) are quite generous and therefore we allow employees 5 days before we contact re FMLA (and some supervisors are more lenient than that). We have considerable trouble getting supervisors to delegate leave as FMLA and to fill out paperwork even when others do the tracking (even though employees here have paid leave for the full 12 weeks if it's their own health condition). Admittedly it works against us, but management has not seen fit to press the issue, so sometimes we're stuck.
In general, not starting the clock benefits the EE.