BACK to work
karenmc
63 Posts
Briefly....full time employee over 40. She sits 8 hours per day at her job. We provided lumbar support per her doctors request after she complained of back pain. She was diagnosed after that with a cracked vertebrae and osteoporosis. She had not worked long enough with us to qualify for FMLA. We have since replaced her with a temp employee and really have no place else to put her. She has been given the all clear to return to work. What issues am I looking at if I tell her she no longer has a job?
Comments
If the Temp is who you want to keep but she is healthy and under 40, I think you're asking for trouble.
At this point, I would put the person back to work in her old position and decide to have the young man "laid off" or seek a transfer for some other work task for which he is qualified.
PORK
Kathy Carlson
If you do not have a policy providing ees that do not qualify for FMLA some sort of protected leave, when you learned that she ha a non-work related injury that required her to miss work, I would have made her absences subject to the attendance policy and discharged her when she exceeded the guidelines. If she did not qualify for FMLA, and you do not offer similar protection for ees that cannot meet the FMLA requirements, you can release them (if the injury in not compensable). But by waiting until she was released, the concerns listed by the others are legitimate. My advice is to see what the doctor says. If she is unable to perform the essential duties of her job, with or without a reasonable accommodation, you can still terminate. I would not make that decision. I would get your attorney involved and I would really LOOK to see if that argument applies. If so, document it and let her go. You will still probably have to defend your actions, but at least you will have a legal argument to base the decision on.
I would also draft a policy addressing non-work related injuries and implement it today. We do not allow ees to work (light duty or otherwise) if they have a non-work related injury because they could suffer additional injury and that would then make us responsible. If they have FMLA, we give it to them. If they exhaust FMLA, or do not qualify, we place them on Disability Leave. Once that runs out, they have ninety days to return without restriction, or they are administratively separated. Transition (light) duty is only for ees that have a work related injury.
If she's cleared with no restrictions, although your concerns are legitimate, I think terminating her will make you vulnerable to legal actions.
My comment about letting her go was based on her not being cleared to full duty. At that time, if she is unable to perform the essential duties of the job with or without a reasonable accommodation, you can let her go. The ADA does not have a requirement that you create a position, or move someone into another position. If she can do the job with a reasonable accommodation, you are back at square one. While the reasonable accommodation angle may parlay any ADA complaint, you still have the gender and age concerns. That is why you should consult counsel. Be honest and lay all the cards on the table. They will tell you what you need to do and help identify thngs that should have been in place to keep getting to this point. That is why you pay them. Also, by getting advise from the attorney and following their advice, it is a good argument that whatever decision is made was not due to a protected category. Kepp that layer of protection there.