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Employee's FMLA Request: Intermittent Leave For Late Arrivals(Published May 5, 2008)
Reprinted from PERSONNEL LEGAL ALERT, a widely read employment law newsletter that keeps HR executives up-to-date on the latest court cases, legal trends, government regulations, and federal legislation that affect the policies you write and procedures you administer. Click here to view a sample issue, get more information, or sign up for a risk-free subscription.
An employee asked a court to rule on whether her chronic tardiness could be protected as intermittent leave under the Family and Medical Leave Act (FMLA). "Lateness is not leave," the court said in ruling against her.
Background: The employee was persistently late for work, usually by only a few minutes, but sometimes up to 30 minutes. She never asked permission to be late or explained that she needed to be late for work for any reason. She did explain her belief that she might have lupus and that she was tardy because she was sick and depressed. When the company offered her a transfer to a later shift, the employee refused because she did not think that the change would help her tardiness.
FMLA protection: The FMLA requires "a medical need" for intermittent leave.
Employee fell short: The employee argued that the company was obligated to suggest to her that she use intermittent leave to excuse her tardiness. The court found that the company was not required to provide individualized notice at all, because the employee never told the company that she was seeking leave for her late arrivals; the company could not have known that leave was being taken, nor could it be expected to treat the common occurrence of late arrivals as leave. Even if the employer had an obligation to provide the employee with individualized notice, "nowhere do the regulations require individualized notice of the specific FMLA right to intermittent leave."
Employee fell short: The company could not be expected to interpret the employee's chronically late arrivals as instances of FMLA intermittent leave that required further inquiry, especially in the complete absence of any explanation from the employee that her late arrivals were "medically necessary" as required for intermittent leave. (Brown v. Eastern Maine Medical Center, D.C. ME, No. 06-60-P-H, 2007)
Related Topic(s): Benefits/FMLA - Family and Medical Leave Act, Leave/FMLA - Family and Medical Leave Act
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