Suspension
3159297
1 Post
An employee has called in sick and alleges to have made a doctor's appointment for Monday. Her immediate supervisor has called this employee at home stated they are suspending her based on an investigation, but does not give any information on the suspension other than they are going to review things that have occurred during the past two weeks. This employee has now met with her doctor and the doctor states she is suffering from a sress related illness and is unsure of when she can return to work.
My question is - does this employee have the ability to collect short term disablility since she called in sick prior to being placed on suspension?
Thanks for your help.
My question is - does this employee have the ability to collect short term disablility since she called in sick prior to being placed on suspension?
Thanks for your help.
Comments
This individual, depending on a number of factors, may qualify already for FMLA. Don't jump the gun and try to terminate until you consider all pertinent facts and possibilities. A manager at any level who has a knee jerk reaction to anything medical related is asking for trouble.
(edit) Now having re-read your question, I would say that if the person meets all the qualifications of your STD policy, the fact that she alerted the company of an illness and told the company she was sick prior to the company's knee-jerk reaction to suspend her....that would probably go a long way in the third party's decision as to eligibility. It's not as if she was suspended and then hollered that she was sick. I think your manager over reacted, but that's another chapter.
With my employer, STD would have been automatic.
PORK
>employee at home stated they are suspending her based on an
>investigation, but does not give any information on the suspension
>other than they are going to review things that have occurred during
>the past two weeks.
This implies that the employee called out knowing that she was suspended and under investigation for something else. I would absolutely follow up that phone call with a letter stating the same.
I believe that, unless your policy says otherwise, she automatically gets the STD even while suspended. If the suspension leads to termination, that's even another thing. You may not have trouble proving that the employee was terminated for performance and that medical leave has nothing to do with it.
"Sam"