RTW after childbirth - how much accommodation?
AJ SPHR
319 Posts
An employee returned to work in December and has asked to be accommodated for (I apologize if this term offends anyone but it's real life!) pumping breast milk twice a day. We have done so and set aside a conference room for her to use that meets her needs.
I've searched these forums and this website to find some additional info regarding these accommodation requirements, but did not find anything. In the case of this kind of accommodation, must you allow paid work time for this activity? Or could you reasonably ask and expect that the employee would perhaps shorten her one-hour lunch period or come in a little early or stay a little later to ensure a full work day?
She is an exempt employee, so I have been advising her manager to focus on performance and productivity and not counting hours, and her manager is doing so. But I would like to find some additional info regarding legal requirements for accommodating this activity and wondered if anyone could point me in the right direction.
Thanks all!
I've searched these forums and this website to find some additional info regarding these accommodation requirements, but did not find anything. In the case of this kind of accommodation, must you allow paid work time for this activity? Or could you reasonably ask and expect that the employee would perhaps shorten her one-hour lunch period or come in a little early or stay a little later to ensure a full work day?
She is an exempt employee, so I have been advising her manager to focus on performance and productivity and not counting hours, and her manager is doing so. But I would like to find some additional info regarding legal requirements for accommodating this activity and wondered if anyone could point me in the right direction.
Thanks all!
Comments
Oops.
Exempt ee you should not be counting hours worked but if ee has a set break and lunch schedule that should be the time they "pump" it may take additional time. Stick with performance issues.
For non-exempt their are no regs on this usually it is on ee's time such as breaks & lunch.
Thanks for your information and that's the same direction I've encouraged the manager to take - focus on performance. Thanks for your thoughts.
That has always been a sore spot in or org. Exempt EE's who smoke take updwards to one break an hour for a cigarette, at least 10 minutes long.
Add those wasted minutes up after a day/week/month/year. She probably isn't "using" anymore company time then the smokers.
I work at a hospital and we have a breast pump room. It's seen as any other break that anyone else takes.