Articles and Blogs

FMLA

Sleeping on the Job – Employer Gets a Wake-Up Call

[01/16/14]

Posted on January 16, 2014 in HR Insights for Health Care

Written by: Stephen W. Lyman

An employee who is caught sleeping on the job will usually end up getting fired. Indeed, this is what happened when a night shift employee was caught sleeping numerous times. The employee was given progressive warnings, including a final warning, before getting caught the last time and was fired. This seems pretty straightforward; however,... READ MORE

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“Just Push Through It” – Comment by Boss Discourages FMLA?

[09/12/13]

Posted on September 12, 2013 in HR Insights for Health Care

Written by: Stephen W. Lyman

Sports Analogy Can Have Multiple Meanings In sports, a coach will sometimes tell a player to just “walk it off” or “push through” the pain when a minor injury happens in a game or in practice.  One Florida insurance company found out that the world of sports and the world of employment are not... READ MORE

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Heads Up for CEOs and Others – Personal Liability for Overtime Violations

[07/29/13]

Posted on July 29, 2013 in HR Insights for Health Care

Written by: Stephen W. Lyman

It doesn’t happen often but when it does it can be a very big deal – personally.  Because of how the term “employer” is broadly defined by the Fair Labor Standards Act (“FLSA”) (which deals with wages, hours and overtime), it has long been possible for a manager to be considered an “employer” and... READ MORE

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Title VII Protects Nursing Moms in the Workplace

[06/14/13]

Posted on June 14, 2013 in HR Insights for Health Care

Written by: Jonathon A. Rabin

Discharge for Lactation Is Sex Discrimination In a recent decision, a federal appeals court held that a termination for “lactating or expressing milk” is sex discrimination under Title VII because it would clearly impose upon women “a burden that male employees need not – indeed, could not – suffer.”  The Court also ruled that... READ MORE

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Medical Leave Up? Ask for More Says the EEOC

[05/21/13]

Posted on May 21, 2013 in HR Insights for Health Care

Written by: Stephen W. Lyman

Your Leave Is Up – Sorry but You’re Fired Many employers have medical leave policies.  Most of those policies allow leave for a maximum duration often three to six months or even up to a year.  The FMLA, of course, guarantees job protection for 12 weeks.  But what is an employer to do if... READ MORE

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Working at Home While on FMLA – Professional Courtesy or Interference?

[04/04/13]

Posted on April 4, 2013 in HR Insights for Health Care

Written by: Stephen W. Lyman

Often times when an employee is at home while on an approved FMLA leave, work-related questions will arise that only the employee can answer.  So, the manager or a co-worker will call the employee at home and get the answer.  Usually that’s not a problem – but it could be depending on how often... READ MORE

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FMLA Forms Have Been Revised – Are Yours Up to Date?

[02/22/13]

Posted on February 22, 2013 in HR Insights for Health Care

Written by: Stephen W. Lyman

As we reported in our February 12, 2013 HR Insights blog positing New FMLA Regs and New FMLA Poster – March 8, 2013, the new FMLA regulations made several changes to the provisions dealing with military servicemembers and their families.  Besides requiring a new FMLA poster that addresses these changes, the U.S. Department of Labor Wage-Hour... READ MORE

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FMLA to Care for Adult Children – A Helpful Interpretation?

[01/22/13]

Posted on January 22, 2013 in HR Insights for Health Care

Written by: Jennifer H. Richter,

The FMLA requires employers with 50 or more employees to grant up to 12 weeks of leave for, among other things, time off that is needed to care for an adult son or daughter over the age of 18 who is “incapable of self-care because of a disability.”  Ever since the Americans with Disabilities... READ MORE

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Las Vegas Trip with Mom – Employer Rolls the FMLA Dice

[11/29/12]

Posted on November 29, 2012 in HR Insights for Health Care

Written by: Stephen W. Lyman

Did Daughter Really “Need to Care for” Mom in Las Vegas? A jury is going to decide the winner of this game.  Recently a district court in Illinois denied an employer’s motion for summary judgment when it fired an employee who traveled with her mother to Las Vegas in order to “care for” her terminally ill... READ MORE

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