Injured employee can't do light duty...
aliciac
88 Posts
We had an ee with an on the job injury that has made him unalbe to perform the job he had before. He used to have a very physically demanding job in our warehouse. As part of the light duty requirements we were having him work inside and train on the sales counter with the intent that he'd just move into sales eventually.
He has been inside and training in sales for months. He's not a very intelligent guy and he's not doing well at all. If he was a new hire we would have certainly gotten rid of him by now since he's obviously unable to grasp the job requirements.
His claim is still open, and probably will be for a couple more months. When the claim is closed we won't have anything for this employee to do as that it was recommended by his doctor that he not go back to the manual labor due to the injury. Can we terminate him at that point for performance issues in the sales job?
He has been inside and training in sales for months. He's not a very intelligent guy and he's not doing well at all. If he was a new hire we would have certainly gotten rid of him by now since he's obviously unable to grasp the job requirements.
His claim is still open, and probably will be for a couple more months. When the claim is closed we won't have anything for this employee to do as that it was recommended by his doctor that he not go back to the manual labor due to the injury. Can we terminate him at that point for performance issues in the sales job?
Comments
How creative is your employer about putting together a modified duty job? If there is no MMI rating and you are still in the transitional stage with this worker's recovery, there may be a combination of odd (minimally physical) jobs he can perform. From one perspective, it may appear that you are setting an undesirable precedent but putting together a very custom modified duty job, but if the circumstances of the injury/recovery are truly unique, the risk of a precedent may be minimal.