
Quoting
cbg
The criteria for FMLA are set by Federal law, and no one, not your doctor, not your employer, not you, not nobody not nohow, has the authority to change or amend them unless they moonlight as a member of Congress. Any leave that is provided that does not meet the criteria is not FMLA, by definition. The criteria are four:
1.) That you have worked for your employer for a minimum of 12 months
2.) That your employer have a minimum of 50 employees within 75 miles of your location
3.) That you have worked a minimum of 1,250 hours in the 12 months immediately preceding your leave
4.) That you or a qualified dependent/beneficiary have a serious health condition as defined by the FMLA statute.
The first three criteria are pretty black and white most of the time, particularly #1 and #3. There can be some grey about #2 if the number of employees hovers around 50, but the statute has a provision for how to count it so that most of the time it's pretty clear. #4, however, can be a bit troublesome.
There is no list of conditions that automatically qualify for FMLA protection. Rather, there is a list of responses; did the patient need to be hospitalized and if so for how long? Did the patient need to be medically treated and if so how many times over how long a period of time? And so on. It is also quite clear that in the case of any question, the DOCTOR makes the final call. But the statute has a provision that allows for time to be provisionally designated as FMLA while it is determined if the condition qualifies for FMLA protection or not. Normally that provision allows for the employer to tentatively designate time as FMLA while they wait for medical confirmation from the doctor, but I don't know of anything in the law that prohibits the doctor from a provisional diagnosis while she reviews the medical information. And in any case, since the statute very definitely gives the doctor the final call on whether something is FMLA or not, if the doctor says it doesn't qualify for FMLA, it doesn't. The employer has no authority to designate time as FMLA if there is no medical justification for it - in fact, the employer is specifically prohibited from formally designating time as FMLA if it doesn't apply. Since FMLA is finite with a very definite limit, they cannot deduct time from your FMLA allotment without it qualifying.
So I suggest you buy a louder alarm clock.
Bookmarks