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Yearly Archives: 2022

An employee is returning to work from medical leave taken under the Family and Medical Leave Act (FMLA). How can the employer know whether the employee is sufficiently recovered to perform their job duties safely and well? The answer may seem obvious – the employer should get a fitness-for-duty certification! But the use of fitness-for-duty certifications following FMLA leave is subject to strict rules. Failure to abide by them leaves an employer open to liability for FMLA interference. 
Background

An employee is returning to work from medical leave taken under the Family and Medical Leave Act (FMLA). How can the employer know whether the employee is sufficiently recovered to perform their job duties safely and well? The answer may seem obvious – the employer should get a fitness-for-duty certification! But the use of fitness-for-duty certifications following FMLA leave is subject to strict rules. Failure to abide by them leaves an employer open to liability for FMLA interference. 
Background

If you are a department head, supervisor or human resources professional, you may have experienced this situation at one time or another: one of your employees has been working a second job while on Family and Medical Leave Act (FMLA) leave. How could the employee be well enough to work this second job but be so incapacitated that they could not work their job for you? You may have wondered, “Is this FMLA fraud?”

If you are a department head, supervisor or human resources professional, you may have experienced this situation at one time or another: one of your employees has been working a second job while on Family and Medical Leave Act (FMLA) leave. How could the employee be well enough to work this second job but be so incapacitated that they could not work their job for you? You may have wondered, “Is this FMLA fraud?”