This document discusses how the Family Medical Leave Act (FMLA) and workers' compensation laws interact when an employee needs to take leave due to a work-related injury. Key points include:
- FMLA provides up to 12 weeks of unpaid, job-protected leave for qualifying medical or family reasons while workers' compensation provides income replacement and medical benefits for work-related injuries.
- The two leaves run concurrently so the period of workers' compensation leave counts against the 12 weeks of FMLA leave as well.
- Employers should designate any workers' compensation leave as also being covered by FMLA to protect both employee and employer rights.
2. How to handle leave-related employment situations Mandatory federal leave law intended to protect employees who need to take time away from work for certain family and medical problems, including the employees own serious health condition.FMLA
3. Governed by state lawsthat protect employees who are injured while working.Varies by state, but generally includes income continuation, medical treatment, rehab, and disability.Does not mandate leave.Workers Comp
5. Protects the employer from any obligation to grant FMLA after the WC leave until eligibility requirements are once again met.Protects the employee by granting all rights provided by the FMLA.Why Designate WC Leave as FMLA?
6. When an employee will miss time due to work-related injuryImmediately determine eligibility for FMLA.Immediately send notice that FMLA will run concurrent with WC leave. Dept. of Labor Form WH-381 can be used (same as notification for any FMLA leave).Leave begins when employee is notified if employer fails to notify, leave cannot be made retroactive. If an employee has missed time due to a work-related injury and has NOT been placed on FMLA, do so immediately.HR Best Practice
7. Vacation, sick, or other paid leave payment while on FMLA for work-related injury:Workers comp typically provides income replacement (2/3 of salary)Therefore, FMLA regulations do NOT allow the use of paid leave if employee is receiving workers compensation.
8. When employee is medically cleared to work during 12-week FMLA period:Employee must be reinstated to the same, or an equivalent, position Workers comp is treated like any other FMLA leave
9. When employee is NOT medically cleared to work at the end of 12-week FMLA period:Employee may be terminated, provided that:The termination is consistent with the treatment of similarly-situated employees who have taken FMLA leaveThe employee was properly placed on FMLA leave and notified that the time off for WC leave ran concurrently with FMLA.Possible ADA accommodations have been considered
10. Reinstatement Obligations Under VT State Workers CompensationLawEmployer must reinstate any employee if the employee recovers within two years of the onset of the disability (21 V.S.A. 則643b)Does not need to be the same job, but must reinstate him/her to the first available position for the worker given the position the worker held at the time of the injury.Employee is obligated to stay in touch with employer regarding his/her status
13. Being on FMLA or WC leave does not protect an employee from termination if the job would have terminated of its own termsHowever, the injured worker, even if terminated, could still be entitled to ongoing WC benefits, including Vocational RehabilitationTerminations Involving Employees on WC and/or FMLA Leave
14. Layoff or job eliminationNon-renewal of contractWork-related issue that warrants termination and comes to light while employee is on leaveExamples of a job terminating on its own terms:
15. Should be made irrespective of an employees leave statusShould be well documented when involving an employee on leave, so that it does not appear to be retaliatory, particularly when a workplace injury is involved Pursuant to statute 21 V.S.A 則 710(b), No person shall discharge or discriminate against an employee from employment because such employee asserted a claim for benefits under this chapter or under the law of any state or under the United States.Termination Decisions:
16. Employee gets hurt on the job one week after giving 2 weeks notice of quitting his job. Can you terminate his employment after his 2-week notice? YesAre you obligated to reinstate him when he is able to return?NoNOTE: This is one of many reasons why its important to get a resignation letter, including an effective date, from any resigning employee. In this case, it provides clear evidence that his employment was ending.Possible Scenario:
17. You have an employee who is out on workers comp whose contract is not being renewed. He was notified of this prior to his injury.Can you terminate him? Yes When would his effective termination date be?the day his contract endsAre you obligated to reinstate him when he is able to return?No, because the job was being eliminated regardless of his status; i.e., it was terminating of its own terms.Possible Scenario
18. You have an employee who is out on workers comp whose contract you dont want to renew due to performance. He was NOT notified of this prior to his injury. Can you terminate him?Only after consulting with counsel to make sure you have enough documentation of his performance. A termination in this case could be construed as retaliatory for getting hurt on the job. Add a twist:
19. You need to make 3 staff cuts. No employees have yet been notified. The three positions have been determined, and one of these employees is currently on FMLA and will still be on FMLA when the cuts will be effective. Can you terminate this employee?YesWhen will the termination be effective? The same date it would have been effective had the employee been actively working.Possible Scenario
20. Proper documentation, common sense, and understanding your legal responsibilities should alleviate most of your anxiety!Dont be afraid of terminations involving employees on leave!