Termination - Falsification?
Hunter1
808 Posts
Eight month employee. Clerical position. "Great employee"
Leaves work on Tuesday after telling co-workers she has pain under her shoulder. She had also told co-workers on Monday that she had played raquetball over the weekend and was sore all over.
Drives self to ER. Lots of tests (heart, etc)
Following Wednesday, reports diagnosis: herniated disc. Work Comp. "Felt strain while reaching at work, told fellow employees"
We get WC carrier involved and they do investigation (We have a great WC carrier).
Fellow employees give written statements "Employee never mentioned anything to us about work related incident"
No record of mention of WC at ER.
Employee makes statement to investigator that she told co-workers and ER staff of work related incident.
Dr's notes one week after incident note: "problem not related to work"
WC carrier denies claim; employee has indicated she will make claim for STD (we haven't seen that claim yet). She'll have to claim 'not work related' in order to collect. If she does so, one claim or the other is false. At any rate, she will have appeal rights for the WC claim.
We will wait for the STD claim, but, do we terminate now for filing a false claim??? She remains off work at present.
Leaves work on Tuesday after telling co-workers she has pain under her shoulder. She had also told co-workers on Monday that she had played raquetball over the weekend and was sore all over.
Drives self to ER. Lots of tests (heart, etc)
Following Wednesday, reports diagnosis: herniated disc. Work Comp. "Felt strain while reaching at work, told fellow employees"
We get WC carrier involved and they do investigation (We have a great WC carrier).
Fellow employees give written statements "Employee never mentioned anything to us about work related incident"
No record of mention of WC at ER.
Employee makes statement to investigator that she told co-workers and ER staff of work related incident.
Dr's notes one week after incident note: "problem not related to work"
WC carrier denies claim; employee has indicated she will make claim for STD (we haven't seen that claim yet). She'll have to claim 'not work related' in order to collect. If she does so, one claim or the other is false. At any rate, she will have appeal rights for the WC claim.
We will wait for the STD claim, but, do we terminate now for filing a false claim??? She remains off work at present.
Comments
It is so interesting when people unsuspectingly walk into traps that I would wait for this one to play out. So don't cut off your fun now that you've gotten everything wired and set to trip. I love it when the fish just jump right into the boat.
She was doing a great job, and we're all blown away by this turn of events. My concern about bringing her back is that in WI, aggravation of a pre-existing condition qualifies as a WC injury, and if she's shown a pre-disposition like this, I'm concerned that she'll pick up a paper clip the first day she's back and will aggravate the injury. Don is right though, there are many issues to be concerned about.
I agree if there is a perceived fraudulent claim being made, a write-up, at least, is in order. Do you have a progressive disciplinary program/procedure? Have you followed it. Is fraud specifically addressed in your policy(ies)
Bottom line, have open discussions with the employee and document her story and those with whom she communicated with and/or claims to have communciated her malady to.
Finally, if you do keep her on after determining she intentionally lied or attempted to commit fraud on the company, how will your employees perceive this?
Despite having a capable manager on our staff, we have decided to relieve her of her position due to lies she has been author to. Sounds harsh, however, the "team" now no longer trusts, respects or is loyal to her - She made her bed and now must lie in it!
She applied for Workers' Comp claiming job -relatedness. She explains it as Don describes. Adn then explains why she filed for STD: "The Workers' Comp carrier representing the compnay ruled that it is NOT job related. So, if the company is saying that it is not job related, then it falls under STD, which I appied for. I think it is job related, but I realized that I couldn't establish it because my doctor and the Worker's Comp say it isn't. So the only thing to do was to file for STD."
Thus the two filings given the differnt grounds for claims aren't necessarily inconsistent and don't necessarily reflect falsfication.
Oh, well, another day in the life of HR. And on Friday the thirteenth.
However if you have all decided that she needs to go, and she does not qualify for FMLA, well then I think you can use attendance as a valid reason to dismiss. Of course past practice and your policy will play a role in this........ :-)
My $0.02 worth.
DJ The Balloonman