Pay/Length of Shift for Modified Duty Work
tashaismydog
8 Posts
Hello-
My question is about modified duty. When an employee is released to modified duty, we often must "create" a job for him or her to do for the duration of the restricted period. In my experience, this work is set up to be performed for the duration of the employee's regular shift, and is paid at the employee's regular rate (barring overtime). Generally, employees on modified duty are not permitted to work overtime.
My GM has asked that if an employee has restrictions and reports for work, does his shift have to be 8 hours or equal to his or her regular schedule? Can an employee report for work, clock in, and then be dismissed two hours (or four hours, or thirty minutes, etc.) and the company not incur Lost Time from work? The GM suggests that the basis for this is that the modified duty job may not necessarily last for eight hours. Another way he put this question is that if the employee reports, and we send him home early, we could pay him for the entire shift (like you do on the day of injury).
We have an excellent safety record, including over 750,000 hours without a lost-time injury. This is kind of a silly injury, the injured is not a great employee (and has only about 90 days with us) and we want to take care of the guy, but not blow our record over this thing. I would like to know if you have experience with this issue and your thoughts on modified duty shifts that are less than the employee's regular shift.
My question is about modified duty. When an employee is released to modified duty, we often must "create" a job for him or her to do for the duration of the restricted period. In my experience, this work is set up to be performed for the duration of the employee's regular shift, and is paid at the employee's regular rate (barring overtime). Generally, employees on modified duty are not permitted to work overtime.
My GM has asked that if an employee has restrictions and reports for work, does his shift have to be 8 hours or equal to his or her regular schedule? Can an employee report for work, clock in, and then be dismissed two hours (or four hours, or thirty minutes, etc.) and the company not incur Lost Time from work? The GM suggests that the basis for this is that the modified duty job may not necessarily last for eight hours. Another way he put this question is that if the employee reports, and we send him home early, we could pay him for the entire shift (like you do on the day of injury).
We have an excellent safety record, including over 750,000 hours without a lost-time injury. This is kind of a silly injury, the injured is not a great employee (and has only about 90 days with us) and we want to take care of the guy, but not blow our record over this thing. I would like to know if you have experience with this issue and your thoughts on modified duty shifts that are less than the employee's regular shift.
Comments
What we do is pay the employee 80% of his or her wages (cannot perform regular job duties). We only have him or her at work for 6 hours. You pay them for as long as there at work. Check with your state laws or call your wc carrier. Hope this helps. It is not counted as days missed but is counted as restricted days.
I don't know whether it is wise to pay people for time not worked, and it may not even be a legal practice. You probably want to run that one past your wc carrier.
My $0.02 worth.
DJ The Balloonman
I hope I'm not making this confusing...
Thanks again for your advice!
Sorry.
My $0.02 worth.
DJ The Balloonman