Sample of FMLA Term Letter
Dgross
21 Posts
We have an employee who will be exhausting their 12 weeks of FMLA soon. We will be terminating this employee (first time ever for our company). I was hoping someone would like to share a sample letter for terminating an employee in this situation. Thanks for any input.
Comments
We have RIF'd people upon returning from a protected leave, but usually it's been a clear case of job elimination. Then we often still get a charge to respond to. We typically do not send termination letters. If I were in your situation, I would be working with our attorney to draft a letter and make sure we were okay with the termination.
Date
Jane Doe
111 FMLA BLVD
Anywhere USA, 22555
Dear Jane:
As you are aware, your Family and Medical Leave expires on _________________. In compliance with the Family and Medical Leave Act, because you are not able to return to work at this time, your position at Company Name will be terminated effective _____________. When you are released to return to work, you may reapply.
You will receive information regarding the continuation of any benefits for which you may be entitled from the Benefits Coordinator.
If you have questions regarding any of the above, please do not hesitate to call me at 999-9999.
Sincerely,
Disclaimer: We have no State Add-On FMLA.
"Dear:
As we discussed in our telephone conversation of June 18, your maximimum allowed period of absence under Family and Medical Leave (FMLA) has been reached and expires on June 20. During that call, you told me that you could not return to work. Since you are unable to return to work at this time, your employment is being terminated effective June 25.
I am enclosing additional copies of our FMLA policy, the approval of your application dated March 12, our letter to you dated May 21 giving you a status update regarding your leave, and our letter of June 11 notifying you of the approaching end date of your FMLA period.
Since you are not returning to work at the end of your approved, maximum allowable FMLA period of absence, our policy does not allow employment continuation. You are welcome to re-apply for employment at a later date, should you so desire.
Sincerely,"
This mailing documents and references a final phone call, provides the employee with second copies of relevant documents for her review and file, references the contact and followup events subsequent to the beginning of the approved leave, cites policy and allows re-application. It documents professionalism and good program administration. It also is as employee-friendly as is possible in a termination. An investigator would not be displeased with the contents of the letter and would conclude that it was more than proper.
Each document referred to in this letter is stapled to the office copy of this letter so that it's all in a neat package for reference or defense at a later date. Be sure you also have the Post Office's return receipts right there as well.
[url]http://www.eeoc.gov/facts/accommodation.html[/url] on the EEOC site gives information about some of the different types of reasonable accommodation. I know it sounds illogical, but there it is. This site also discusses how an employer with a no-fault leave policy cannot automatically terminate an employee who has been on leave for a certain amount of time if that employee is ADA qualified and needs additional leave as a reasonable accommodation (unless the employer can offer another effective accommodation or show the leave would cause undue hardship).
Indefinite leave is not a reasonable accommodation, so at the point an employee's doctor says they don't know when the employee will be able to return to work, we can then terminate them.
Again, this might not be an issue for you, but before we terminate, we make sure there is not an ADA issue.