Light Duty
jenhall
17 Posts
Hello everyone. We have an ee who has hurt his back and we've been going through the proper work comp channels for the past couple of months. There has been about a week or so loss time all in all and everytime the ee returns to work the specialist puts him on light duty. We've got a temp in to fill his place (this is a warehouse position) and the manager is working forklifts also. The manager came to me last week and he wants to let the employee go because we have nothing he can do on light duty and he feels like we need to get two full time people who are not restricted in order to catch up. My question is, can we let this guy go without risking a lawsuit? Any help on this is appreciated.
Comments
Be careful about following the termination advice of the manager though. Managers are sometimes not concerned with how a decision might impact your liability. But, typically, yes, he can be terminated if he is not and cannot perform the job's duties. It is also true that you need not put a person back to work on what you called light duty, simply because a physician or specialist released them for light duty. The company makes that decision, not the specialist or the comp carrier. They all have interests and agendas different from your own.
If the light duty restrictions are made permanent (when the doctor determines the ee has reached maximum medical improvement), and the ee cannot perform the primary functions of their job, and if we have no other jobs available, then we terminate.
Of course, there are exceptions to every rule, but this is our general philosophy.
We believe that if our employees have the mind-set that our company will work with all doctors to get the injured employee on a light-duty program there will be less abuse of the system. Employees that are at work even in a light-duty capacity tend to heal faster than if they were sitting at home.