Funeral Leave Question
LindaS
1,510 Posts
We are a union facility and have a funeral leave policy in our contract that allows for three paid days off for the planning and/or arranging of certain family members funerals. I have an employee whose mother passed away last Thursday, the funeral was scheduled for Saturday but Saturday AM the employee's brother passed away as well. The family is now having a double funeral for the two.
In your opinion would the employee be granted sixe days off (three for each) or just the three? This may seem petty to some of you but when you have a union facility you always have to keep in mind that once you do for one, you have to do for all and we want to be sure we make the right decision.
Thanks for your help.
In your opinion would the employee be granted sixe days off (three for each) or just the three? This may seem petty to some of you but when you have a union facility you always have to keep in mind that once you do for one, you have to do for all and we want to be sure we make the right decision.
Thanks for your help.
Comments
It truly does depend on the exact wording of your contract, but I tend to err on the side of compassion with an issue like this. Not to be macabre, but if this employee's brother had died the day of the mother's funeral (or anytime after), the employee would have gotten the 3 days in addition to the 3 days for the mother.
Our policy does not specify what the time is to be used for, just that the employee is granted up to 3 days off upon the death of an immediate family member, or 1 day off for those not in the immediate family. So according to our policy, again, I would grant 6 days.
Regardless of if they all die at the same time, or at varied times throughout their employment, it should be 3 days for each. Sorry to say, but I can't beleive this is even a question in people's minds. Has all the compassion for our fellow man(and woman) gone out of the workplace? Tis a sad day indeed if the question is answered with a yes. I personally would think twice about staying at a corporation that showed little or no compassion, especially in the scenarios presented here.
I don't mean to suggest those things should be absent from our departments and it's often tough to make the hard decisions that seem to make us appear heartless. This is a general thought and has no particular relation to the funeral question in the variety of scenarios this thread presents.
I suggest first we must follow policy, assuming there is clear policy. If policy allows flexibility, then I suggest we should be flexible within reason, analyzing precedent and consistency. And lastly, if there is no policy, we must act consistently, but only after carefully thinking through the possible consequences. And somewhere in each of those is room for compassion, which is surely secondary to our stewardship over the company's policies and interests.
With that said, in my previous post, I was purely speaking regarding the funeral situations presented. I cannot imagine any employer not "bending the rules" in certain tragic situations; as long as they did that for everyone. It is not very often that we'd have to come across scenarios presented here (thankfully!).
From a compassion standpoint, I am not against providing the employee additional unpaid time off to deal with his grief but the paid time needs to be done in accordance with the contract.
Thanks for the suggestion.