Should employers designate leave as FMLA without a certification?
Joe Employee called in one day, saying he’d been injured and was in the emergency room. He then called in every day for a few days. Joe’s employer might be wondering what their next step is.
Should employers, in such situations, designate the time off as leave under the federal Family and Medical Leave Act (FMLA) based on the limited information they have?
Initially, employers might not know when the employee will return to work, what treatment is involved, and so on. This is especially true in a case like Joe’s, where there’s a medical emergency. If employers designate the time off as FMLA leave, how much time do they allot?
When employees take leave for reasons that might qualify for FMLA protections, employers may ask that employees give them a certification supporting the need for leave. Employers use the information in the certification to determine whether or not the condition meets the criteria for FMLA leave.
In some situations, however, employers won’t have the requested certification when the leave begins. When an employee is in the emergency room (ER), for example, the ER doctor might not know how much total leave the employee might need, and might be reluctant to complete a certification.
Steps to take
Once employers have even a hint that an employee’s absence might qualify for FMLA leave, they should begin their FMLA steps, including giving the employee an eligibility/rights & responsibilities notice. If employees don’t initially give employers enough information, employers may ask for a complete and sufficient certification. Employers should apply the FMLA protections while waiting for a certification.
Employers need to tell employees about the potential risks of not providing a certification, and such information is included in the eligibility/rights & responsibilities notice. It is in section II of the notice and is in bold font. Employers may highlight the statement further if they wish.
Without the information in a certification, whether on a particular form or not, employers might not be able to determine whether the reason for the leave qualifies and whether to designate it as FMLA leave.
Employers aren’t required to ask for a certification, and they may not do so when leave is strictly for bonding with a healthy child. Otherwise, they’re free to ask for them.
Once employers ask employees to give them a certification, employees have 15 calendar days to provide one. If employees don’t provide one, after the 15 days expire, employers may delay or deny the FMLA protections until the employee gives them a certification.
The employee is responsible for getting a completed certification. If an ER doctor won’t complete one, for example, perhaps another treating health care provider, such as their primary care provider, will. Either way, employees must make a good-faith effort to get a certification if their employer requires one.
If an employee never gives the requested certification, and no extenuating circumstances are involved, the time off isn’t FMLA leave and shouldn’t be designated as such.
Key to remember: If employees don’t initially give enough information about an absence for employers to designate it as FMLA leave, employers may ask for a certification.