Would this be a precedent?
LindaS
1,510 Posts
I have an employee who suffered a significant brain injury last summer that required extensive surgery that resulted in his being off work for 6 months (the dr's thought it would be longer). He came back earlier than anyone thought he would but over the course of the past several weeks, he has been on a "downhill slide". After discussing the situation with him he went to his physician who recommended shortening his hours, which we did but this doesn't seem to be helping anything.
This morning he came to me and admitted he is unable to read (a safety hazard), has forgotten the names of most of his co-workers and forgets how to do his job. In the course of our discussion we granted him a leave of absence to allow him to get the treatment he needs that will hopefully allow him to return to work. At this point we don't know how long that will be which creates a problem..
We are unionized and no matter which way I look at it, this EE has exhaused all his FMLA leave and hasn't worked the requisite hours to qualify for another 12 weeks. We have employees who have been abusing their FMLA leave and I am concerned that by granting this EE an extended leave for an undetermined amount of time will come back to haunt us should another employee run out of their FMLA allotment and need additional time off.
I want to help this individual because he truly does want to work but needs this additonal time off but I'm looking at the bigger picture and wondering if being a good samaritan will come back to hanut me later.
Any suggestions?
This morning he came to me and admitted he is unable to read (a safety hazard), has forgotten the names of most of his co-workers and forgets how to do his job. In the course of our discussion we granted him a leave of absence to allow him to get the treatment he needs that will hopefully allow him to return to work. At this point we don't know how long that will be which creates a problem..
We are unionized and no matter which way I look at it, this EE has exhaused all his FMLA leave and hasn't worked the requisite hours to qualify for another 12 weeks. We have employees who have been abusing their FMLA leave and I am concerned that by granting this EE an extended leave for an undetermined amount of time will come back to haunt us should another employee run out of their FMLA allotment and need additional time off.
I want to help this individual because he truly does want to work but needs this additonal time off but I'm looking at the bigger picture and wondering if being a good samaritan will come back to hanut me later.
Any suggestions?
Comments
Linda, the important thing we all see and feel is the struggle you are having in dealing with the human side of the situation. You are a sweetheart, and there is no way around the fact that you are gonna feel like hell when you do have to let him go. I have a feeling that he probably will never be able to come back to work, and all that you will be doing is delaying the inevitable. Still I understand your reasoning.
My $0.02 worth.
DJ The Balloonman
Some cases demand our opportunity to terminate as the best course of action. Always remember the bottom line is: one must be unemployed for 6 months before disability will normally kick-in. Given any enrollment situation out of the kindness or your good faith intentions is also hurting the individual's timing and delay for the greater valued SSI Disability and medical coverage for his life time of care.
Never, never get between some one's opportunity for long term care, when appropriate. It reads to me as very close to our case with brain cancer surgery, followed with surgery for thyroid cancer, FMLA used up, FMLA extended company medical plan totaling 26 weeks used up; he came back on light duty, worked him as an assistant driver riding with his peers while waiting for the SS Disability to get approved. After six weeks, he was notified he was disapproved because he was still employed!!! Were we wrong? Yes, because I knew it would come to this, but the ee was loved by every one and every one wanted to hang in there with him, and we still are!!!
In October he'll pass the mark for another FMLA, maybe we'll get him well and back to driving an 18 wheeler. Medically, he has been given a good report, some prayers have been answered. Mentally, he appears to be gaining some real positive happenings. Were we wrong? yes is still my position, because the value, at his age and medically history, he should be living a quality life on SS Disability and medicare/medicaid.
PORK
I think the union president is smart enough to realize that their (the committee's)failure to agree to this situation would amount to political suicide. The committee has taken quite a hit from EEs that are unhapy with the way they run things and once word got out that we (the company) had to terminated this much liked employee because the union wouldn't agree to allow us to grant him this LOA, things would get pretty ugly.
In all honesty I don't expect the EE to be able to return to his former job even after additional treatment. The injury and subsequent problems were very damaging but he has tried so hard over the past year and to pull the rug out from under him at this point seems heartless. I would rather grant him this time and allow him and his phyicians to figure out what to do rather then tell him, after all he's been through, that we are terminating his employment.
ForumFoux or whatever it is is entirely too risky to try and pronounce on the fly.