|
Home ı
Article's Table of Contents
Introduction to the
Family and Medical Leave Act
FMLA leave vs. "no
fault" attendance policies
The U.S. Department of Labor has issued
regulations forbidding an employer from counting FMLA leave time against an employee under
a "no fault" attendance policy. See, 29 C.F.R. Section 825.220(c).
A "no fault" attendance policy is an
attendance policy that specifies that an employee can only miss so many days of work
before being subjected to disciplinary action (usually termination) -- even if the
employee was absent through no fault of his own. It does not matter why the employee was
absent -- just that the employee was absent.
So for example, let's
assume an employer has a
"no fault" attendance policy which states that an employee cannot miss more than
20 days of work per year. If an employee gets a severe case of food poisoning in
employer's cafeteria and misses work for 21 days, the employee would normally be fired.
But if the employee takes medical leave under the Family and Medical Leave Act, the 21
days cannot count against the employee under employer's "no fault" policy.
Spouses who work for same employer
using FMLA leave
If a husband and wife work for the same employer
and they both qualify for family or medical leave, the employer can limit the combined
time they take off to 12 workweeks if the leave is family leave. However, if each
spouse has a serious medical condition, they could each take off up to 12 workweeks during
a 12 month period. See, 29 U.S.C. Section 2612(f).
Using
FMLA leave for the intended purpose
If someone takes family or medical leave
under the FMLA, he or she had better use the leave time for its intended purpose. If an
employer honestly believes that an employee is using the leave time for some other
purpose, that employee can be terminated.
Article's Table of Contents
ı Previous Page ı
Next Page
|