Was I supposed to provide a “reasonable accommodation” for that?

If you are reading this blog post then chances are you are in one of three situations: 1) an Employee is suing you under the Americans with Disabilities Act (“ADA”) for failing to provide a reasonable accommodation; 2) an Employee asked for sick leave or extended leave under the Family Medical Leave Act (“FMLA”) and are now asking for an extension; or 3) an Employee made a comment to you and that comment has made you wonder if you should be doing more. This post is going to focus more on the last two scenarios because if you are being sued for failing to make a reasonable accommodation, you should seek an Attorney pretty fast to ensure you are preserving your best defenses from the beginning.

I also want to make a couple of assumptions known before continuing – this post assumes that you are a qualified employer, the employee is a qualified employee, and your company is subject to the ADA. This is a crucial first step when even determining if a reasonable accommodation, or the interactive process, is needed, but is one that will not be discussed here. Lastly, this is a very broad overview of reasonable accommodations – this subject is very fact intensive and should be analyzed further by an Attorney if you are truly worried.

The ADA is a federal law which does in fact create preferential treatment of one employee over another. In fact, Courts have said that by definition, the ADA requires employers to treat employees with disabilities differently that employees without one. Due to this, you have to be careful about what is being asked of you.

When to begin the Interactive Process

FMLA Leave or Sick Leave

As an entrepreneur that is subject to the FMLA and ADA requirements, you may not have known that the two federal regulations could cross paths. Even if you did everything right under the FMLA regulations, you may have failed under the ADA requirements. When an Employee is out on extended leave, or FMLA leave, their disability could qualify under the “covered employee” definition of the ADA. When this happens, you have to be careful with conversations. The Employee may not be knowingly making an ADA request for a reasonable accommodation today, but could find out tomorrow after you have denied it.

Here is one type of scenario that you need to be concerned with. When you receive an FMLA request to be out for the full 12 weeks, and you grant it, you may be required to extend that leave another couple weeks or months.

If an employee brings a doctor’s note to you and the note tells you that the employee is almost ready to come back to work but really needs a couple more weeks off, this should send alarms off in your head. Just because the employee has used all of their sick leave, personal leave, and has exhausted their FMLA leave, you may be required to give them more leave under the ADA’s reasonable accommodation. This is because the Courts have found that extending leave is “reasonable” when it is not an “indefinite leave.”

This of course gets a little trickier when the employee has been out for 12 weeks and is then coming back in and asking for an additional 8 months of leave. Or, better yet, the doctor’s note tells you that the employee cannot come back tomorrow and she is unsure when the employee will be able to come back. When you’re dealing with these situations, call your Attorney.

Random Request for an Accommodation:

You have to be listening to your employees when they come in and make complaints about their back hurting, or not being able to drive at night time, or not being able to hear or see while at work, or not being able to concentrate without their pet snake being beside them. What you may dismiss as a common complaint could turn around and bite you tomorrow because you dismissed it.

Best practice is to say, “How can I help you?”

That’s right – when an employee comes forward and says something to the effect of “Man, I could really use [Insert Anything Here] because of my [Insert any Condition Here],” you should immediately be wondering if the ADA applies. Worst case scenario, the ADA applied and you ignored it – now having to pay an Attorney to fix everything.

The next most important thing to do is, DOCUMENT EVERYTHING. This part is so important that I am going to bold, italicize, and underline it. As soon as the employee made the request – I could really use X – you should be taking notes about what the employee said and what you said to help. This way, you can send the notes to your lawyer and your lawyer can make sure you’re protected.

Just because an employee has asked for a specific accommodation, “I could really use my pet snake at work to help me calm down,” does not mean you have to give that specific accommodation! (Let’s be real, who wants to work when their co-worker has a pet snake slithering around!) As the employer, you have the right of choosing what is reasonable. You just have to go through that interactive process of talking it over with the employee.

As always, the Attorneys at Stock and Leader, LLP are happy to further counsel you and your employees on the ADA, or other leave laws, to ensure you are doing everything you can to stay compliant. Remember, asking an Attorney today could save you thousands in time and money tomorrow.

 

Citations:

The Americans with Disabilities Act of 1990, as amended,  42 USCS §§ 12101 et seq

EEOC Fact Sheet – “The FMLA, the ADA, and Title VII of the Civil Rights Act of 1964”

U.S. Airways Inc. v. Barnett, 53 U.S. 391, 122 S. Ct. 1516 (2002).

Ruggiero v. Mount Nittany Medical Center, 2018 US App. LEXIS 15056 (3rd Cir. 2018)(unpublished)

Sessoms v. University of Pennsylvania, 2018 US App. LEXIS 16611 (3rd Cir. 2018)(unpublished)

Navigating PA Employee Leave Laws: What you can and can’t do

There are two important questions that small business owners should consider as they set up their company, draft an employee handbook, or face an employee asking for paid leave:

  1. Must employers let employees be off for vacation, sick leave, holidays, jury duty, or any of the other multitude of potential leave days in Pennsylvania?
  2. And if they are allowed those days off, must the employer pay them to not work?

The general rule of thumb is that there is no Pennsylvania labor law which requires an employer to pay an employee not to work. Benefits like sick leave, vacation pay and severance pay are payments to an employee not to be at work. Of course, with every great rule of thumb, there is always an exception; an employer must follow its own rules regarding paying employees not to work. If the employer has made it a policy to offer a number of paid vacation days per year, paid sick days per year, and paid holiday leave, then the employer is bound by those policies. This means that an employer only has to pay these benefits if the employer has a policy to pay them or a contract with the employee to pay them. It is important to note that there may also be federal requirements governing leave that has to be provided under federal laws, such as the Americans with Disabilities Act and Family Medical Leave Act.

Since employers have a range of options available to them when it comes to paying employees not to work, there are other business strategies that they have to keep in mind. Employers have to realize that they need to balance both the pros and cons of offering paid leave. By making the offer, employers are bound to pay. By not making the offer, employers will be able to invest the saved money back into their business, but employees may feel dissatisfied or look for another place to work that offers better benefits.

Below, I will guide you through some of the leave laws that Pennsylvania deals with. There may be further additional requirements for certain people within the City of Philadelphia. This post only deals with general Pennsylvania state law governing employee leave rights.

Vacation Leave

In Pennsylvania, employers are not required to provide employees with vacation benefits, either paid or unpaid. However, if the employer chooses to provide those benefits, then they must comply with the terms of the established policy or employment contract.

This leaves it open to the employer to decide whether or not to offer vacation days and whether or not those days will be paid.

Sick Leave

In Pennsylvania, employers are not required to provide employees with sick leave benefits, either paid or unpaid. However, if the employer chooses to provide those sick leave benefits, then they must comply with the terms of the established policy or employment contract.

This is one of those areas where the employer may be required provide leave under a federal law though!

*UPDATE 2/26/2018*

On February 15, 2018, the City of Pittsburgh filed a brief with the Pennsylvania Supreme Court urging them to revive an ordinance requiring employers to provide paid sick leave to their workers.

Holiday Leave

Pennsylvania law does not require private employers to provide employees with either paid or unpaid holiday leave.

You may have heard of some businesses offering their employees “premium” pay for working during the holidays. In Pennsylvania, this of course is not required. However, employers will want to be careful with overtime pay. If the employee qualifies for special overtime pay because they worked the holiday, then the employer must make that adjustment.

Jury Duty Leave

An employer is not required to pay an employee for time spent responding to, or serving on, a jury.

Because jury duty is so important in our society, there are a few other employee protections built in. An employer cannot take away an employee’s seniority position or benefits, or fire, threaten, or otherwise coerce them, because the employee receives or responds to a summons, serves as a juror, or attends court for prospective jury service.

Employers in the retail or service industries with fewer than 15 employees and employers in the manufacturing industry with fewer than 40 employees are exempted from the extra employee protections. However, in order to help employees in these industries, employees working for employers in these industries who are exempt from the law due to their limited number of employees may be excused from jury service upon request to the court.

Voting Leave

Pennsylvania does not have any laws that require an employer to grant its employees leave, either paid or unpaid, to vote.

Bereavement Leave

Pennsylvania law does not require employers to provide employee bereavement leave.

Bereavement leave is leave that is taken by an employee due to the death of another individual, usually a close relative. As with all other areas of leave, employers have the ability to offer bereavement leave. But, if the employer makes the offer, they must continue to honor it.

State of Emergency

If the Governor declares a state of emergency and an employee is unable to come to work due to road closures, the employer is not allowed to fire or discipline the employee for that absence. However, the employer is not required to pay the employee for the resulting missing work.

Maternity Leave

Maternity leave is one of those tricky subjects, like sick leave. While Pennsylvania does not require employers to give paid or unpaid time off to employees after having a child, federal law does require it under the Family Medical Leave Act, so you will want to make sure you are compliant under federal law.

Sources:

http://www.dli.pa.gov/Individuals/Labor-Management-Relations/llc/Pages/Wage-FAQs.aspx

43 Pa. Stat. Ann. § 1482 (LexisNexis, Lexis Advance through 2017 Regular Session Acts 1-81; P.S. documents are current through 2017 Regular Session Acts 1-54) [State of Emergency]

43 Pa. Stat. Ann. § 1483 (LexisNexis, Lexis Advance through 2017 Regular Session Acts 1-81; P.S. documents are current through 2017 Regular Session Acts 1-54) [State of Emergency]

42 Pa. Cons. Stat. Ann. § 4563 (LexisNexis, Lexis Advance through 2017 Regular Session Acts 1-81; P.S. documents are current through 2017 Regular Session Acts 1-54) [Jury Duty]

https://www.law360.com/articles/1013634/pittsburgh-urges-justices-to-ok-sick-leave-security-laws