No RTW slip since he used vacation time?
DB
136 Posts
Give me an honest opinion if I'm being the big, bad HR lady again:
A union employee was taken from work with shortness of breath and other symptoms indicating heart problems. He was hospitalized for at least two days and off for a total of five. I asked for a return to work (RTW) slip when he returned. He used vacation time to cover his days off (questionable but not unusual) so he doesn't think he needs a RTW slip. The union contracts states that a RTW slip is required if the employee is on sick leave for 3 or more days.
Since the entire chain of command is aware that this is a health related time off, don't we have an obligation to make sure that the employee should be working? The work can be physically demanding.
I haven't even gotten to FMLA with the employee.
Am I being paranoid or responsible?
A union employee was taken from work with shortness of breath and other symptoms indicating heart problems. He was hospitalized for at least two days and off for a total of five. I asked for a return to work (RTW) slip when he returned. He used vacation time to cover his days off (questionable but not unusual) so he doesn't think he needs a RTW slip. The union contracts states that a RTW slip is required if the employee is on sick leave for 3 or more days.
Since the entire chain of command is aware that this is a health related time off, don't we have an obligation to make sure that the employee should be working? The work can be physically demanding.
I haven't even gotten to FMLA with the employee.
Am I being paranoid or responsible?
Comments
This is my first post. I'm at a 400 employee manufacturing plant in Wisconsin.
My $0.02 worth.
DJ The Balloonman
Everything is in the wording of the union contract? Lucky you, I think! All of the union contracts I've ever worked with are deliberately vague, with lots of room for "interpretation" (i.e., grievances) on both sides!
Our attendance policy is outside the contract, and we require a return to work slip from the doctor once an employee is out three days. Our contract does include wording that allows us to compel an employee to undergo a fitness for duty exam "for sanitary and safety reasons" during employment.
>much too sensitive for you to challenge so cut me some slack.
I've been 'foruming' for awhile now; but funny thing, I've never thought of Don D as "too sensitive for ... challenge." I must have missed something; perhaps in the nuance.
(Ranger, be forwarned!)
In this case, the fact is that he employee was on sick leave. The accrued time used in this case is only a pay mechanism. It doesn't change the reason for the absence, which was a sick leave. Any reasonable reading of the contract provision, as posted, says "sick leave" not "sick pay." Thus, if you would require a RTW clearance for employees who used sick pay or had unpaid sick leave for similar medical circumstances, then it would be appropriate to require one in this case.
The supervisor and I were to meet with the employee and the shop steward at noon today. The shop steward (who said I was a reasonable person and let's just talk about it) suddenly needed to take the afternoon off. The employee states that the business agent and the attorney will contact us on Monday to set a meeting.
I'm thinking that I should just go the FMLA route with this. Send the Employer Response to Employee Request for Family or Medical Leave. The employee didn't actually request FML but, to my understanding, just by being aware of a potential serious health condition, the paperwork should be sent. I do this with other employees so I would be consistent.
The supervisor of the employee wants to require a RTW slip or Certification of Health Care Provider no matter what. My boss does not want any problems or conflicts EVER and I think it's too late for that.
Please help.