sharing sick leave
hr tom
2 Posts
Does anyone out there have a "shared leave" policy that allows employees to donate their sick time to another ee?
Comments
Good luck!
Nae
At my current employer, we has a program where a donor may give sick leave hours to a coworker (again to the employee, not a pool); but there aren't a lot of administrative strings. It is a striaght hour for hour donation without any up front deductions. This format runs smoothly. It is up to the HR Director to approve. Unless there are truly mitigating circumstances, I don't see myself ever denying donations.
(e.) In a case where an employee has a serious injury/illness and needs a considerable amount of sick leave and does not have sufficient leave to cover the absence, the employee may request donated sick leave. The employee must first use all of his/her own available leave including sick and vacation leave. Once all the employee’s leave is exhausted the employee must complete a Leave Donation Request Form. Employees with more than two hundred (200) hours of accumulated sick leave may donate any amount of sick leave they desire, so long as they do not bring their balance below 200 hours. Those employees with two hundred (200) hours or less may donate a maximum of eight hours. Upon receipt of written authorization from a donor employee the donated leave will be handled in the following manner:
1) The HR Assistant shall have the full amount of leave removed from the donor’s account and placed in a trust account in the recipient’s name along with the donations of all other employees who make donations to the same employee for the same absence.
2) If the amount of donated leave exceeds the amount needed to cover the absence the leave shall be prorated and deducted according to the amounts donated from each employee.
3) When either the recipient returns to work or the length of the absence exceeds the total amount of leave donated, which ever occurs first, the amount of leave not deducted shall be returned to the donor(s)’s account(s) in the manner described in #2. The trust account will then be closed.