Pregnancy/childbirth not a serious health condition?
Ms_Shepard
27 Posts
I just put in my request for FMLA leave due to the impending birth of my child. I stated that I would be taking off 12 weeks and mentioned that I would be using my sick leave, and providing a Dr's note, and when this was exhausted, I will be using my vacation leave. My boss took my request to the Senior VP and he is insisting that recovering from childbirth is not a serious health condition, and that I cannot use my sick leave. (other employees have used their sick leave, but apparently they did not know about it since they are not in his department)
Your thoughts?
Your thoughts?
Comments
By the way, how much sick leave do you have available? I would think you could feel safe using 6 weeks of sick leave towards the birth and recovery. More if there are complications. I would have to wonder about using more than 6 weeks sick leave for a 'normal' delivery, but again, it goes back to your policy. This is just one reason why we have just one leave bank, Paid Time Off.
Good luck!
Our policy only mentions that you may use sick leave for a serious medical condition. In the past, we have let women use their sick leave after childbirth only if they have a note from the doctor stating this recommendation. The Sr. VP seems not to be aware of this, as most previous leaves granted were not in his department.
I currently have about three weeks of sick leave accrued.
That was the easy part. The hard part will be getting all this across without ruffling any feathers and ruining any future you have there.
Good luck!
I am going to create my own truism here: "The degree to which an HR decision may be ill-founded is directly proportionate to the degree of influence which came from the minds of financial staff when the decision was determined".
Thanks
Boy, do you have that one right! In one of my past lives, our Sr VP of Finance used to ask one of our staff accountants if she planned to have another child soon during every annual performance evaluation, because if she did, he wouldn't be giving her a salary increase. When I told him that this was ill-advised (to say the least), his response was that it was clearly a job-related question, since if she had a baby, she'd be off the job for several months and therefore didn't deserve an salary increase!
Margaret Morford
theHRedge
615-371-8200
[email]mmorford@mleesmith.com[/email]
[url]http://www.thehredge.net[/url]