sick children
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this subject probably has been talked about before, but I am going to ask again. Can someone give me some insight on employee's taking time off to care for sick children. This will not fall under the FMLA because the children are sick a couple days here and there or the employee takes off to pick them up from daycare. Most daycare's will not take kids that have a temp. My question is do we need to give these people special treatment. Do we need to excuse there absence more than a single employee. Some of the employee's are single parents or the other partner will not take off work. Or in one case the orther partner is in treatment. One employee has been given an oral warning and tomorrow she wants to talk to me and I believe this is the reason. What are out rights as an employer?
Any help with this would be greatly appreciated.
Spoden in MN.
Any help with this would be greatly appreciated.
Spoden in MN.
Comments
I don't know of any federal laws regarding this issue but common sense needs to come into the picture. I don't think "special treatment" is called for but if you make allowances for others with different needs, you should be doing the same for these individuals.
Good luck,
Dutch2
We, too, just allow "sick days" for the ee - not family..
Good luck,
Stuart
>Sick Child" (non-serious health condition). I'm in Oregon and we do
>have this coverage under OFLA (Oregon Family Leave Act), and you
>thought only CA was that liberal. I would recommend contacting your
>local (state) DOL for information on any provisions specific to your
>area.
>
>Good luck,
>Stuart
Washington state can beat that! We have always been required to allow employees to use sick leave to care for a sick child under the age of 18. Effective 1/1/03, we now are required to allow employees to use ANY type of accrued leave, their choice, to care for a sick child (no age limit, who has a "health condition that requires treatment or supervision"), a spouse, parents, parent-in-laws, and grandparents with a "serious health or emergency condition."
Definately need to check with your own state's DOL.
It all depends on your company's policy. Some companies are more family-friendly than others. Whatever policy we have, there will always be some 20% who will try to abuse them no matter what policy we have. We should always derive our policies based on the common good, the 80% who will benefit most from the policy. It is your company's call.
In a perfect world, an employer would be able to consider these issues, but a company has to be careful when it singles out one segment of the employee population for special treatment. You will have to be prepared to honor a myriad of requests from other employees who feel their issues are just as important as those folks with children.
Eliant
In our company there would be "no pay due" and the sick and vacation time for the two week waiting period would be taken, but the employee would have the opportunity to nurse the child at home for the next 12 week equalivant or 70 days off without pay. If the employee wants to use all of her vacation time available during the FMLA period, we would also allow that opportunity to our employee who is in need.
May all of you fall into the employee's shoes and see how tight the shoe fits!!!
Just Ole Pork
Around here we wear sandals and sneakers.
Ole Pork struck again! Pork
Rather than invite athlete's foot by walking in people's shoes, I'm more interested in following the law, enforcing company policy and doing so consistently to protect the company. If that means terminating employees who miss an inordinate number of non-protected days in a period of time, so be it.
In a perfect world (like Paul['s in Oregon) where there is no need for rules and all employees respect each other and the employer and none would create issues, maybe we wouldn't need to deal with these sorts of things. But in the real world we do, and often employees are terminated in the process.
>vacation and sick time which includes taking care of sick children. I
>am acutally shocked at how many of your organizations don't allow for
>sick days to cover parents who have sick children. Granted, I have
>always worked in a "white collar" organization so maybe that is why so
>many of you fear that employees may take advantage of this policy.
>But personally speaking, I can't believe the lack of flexibility for
>this topic. Wow! I thought in 2003 we were moving forward on the
>issues of working parents - this has really opened my eyes.
Does your policy also allow for taking care of other relatives other than children who might be sick, i.e., elderly parents, etc.
Personally, I have seen all kinds of sick leave plans and have yet to find one that is not rife with abuse. And I have worked in law, banking and healthcare organizations. The abuse I've seen was not just for care of children but mostly because people did not want to use their vacation time for "days off", they simply "called in sick". We remedied that by combining the sick and vacation into a very generous PTO plan which employees are encouraged to manage responsibly. If they choose to abuse it, then they go into a LWOP situation which will affect their performance.