Use of Sick Leave
HRfan
1 Post
We have a policy that requires the HR office (me), to do a sick leave assessment on each employee at the time of their annual evaluation. This requires me to track all employee's sick leave usage at all times. If we have an employee that uses more than 40 hours of sick leave in any six month period, we do a Sick Leave Assessment form which requires the supervisor to question the employee about the absences (which has already been accomplished when the employee fills out the leave request). Nine times out of ten we take no action against the employee for using more than 40 hours. All employees earn 8 hours of sick leave each month. Our supervisors will usually take action prior to the evaluation period if there is excessive absences.
Please tell me what you think about this procedure . . . is it really necessary?
Thanks
Please tell me what you think about this procedure . . . is it really necessary?
Thanks
Comments
I have no problem with the supervisor tracking attendance (maybe it can be done through a timekeeper or the use of a "master" timecard for the year) and being aware of any work issues that result from absences and discussing them with the empluyee as needed (e.g., perhaps the superivsor is noting that deadlines are being missed during a period that the employee is out frequently).
I don't think that merely because the employee has used X number of hours especially if its below what has been allocated (which is 96 for the year), that the employee has an "excess absence" problem. I have always felt that the allocation of paid time balances is a starting point but that the critical issue is the impact absences are having on the job, especially when the allocation has been exceeeded.
Of course, "protected absences", such as FMLA, would not fall into this.
So, for both an operational consideration (not having unnecessary redundant procedures and to concentrate on dealing with true "excessive" absence problems, I suggest that the process you follow be eliminated or signficantly changed.
Get the supervisors more trained in dealing with poor attendance...what to look for and how to respond.
PORK