RECORDED TRAINING COURSE


The COVID-19 pandemic has increased the need for employee leave, either to care for themselves or family members. Not all states have Paid Family Leave laws. Some employees will need more leave than state/local paid sick leave laws to provide and may qualify for leave under FMLA or as an accommodation of a disability.

Occasionally you get one or a few employees, who either game the system or who start out with a legitimate leave request but somewhere along the way, start to take advantage.

Leave abuse in one way or another will impact your company’s bottom line. Whether immediate or eventual, decreased productivity will be one of the first effects—and decreased productivity usually means decreased revenue. Often it also leads to lower morale amongst your other employees, which can impact your company’s ability to attract and retain good talent. That too, impacts your company’s bottom line.

Taking a proactive approach to managing employee leave can significantly decrease the risk of leave abuse, increase the ability to attract and retain good talent and increase your bottom line.

SESSION HIGHLIGHTS:

  • Defining Leave Abuse
  • Common Ways Employees Abuse Leave Time
  • Determining Eligibility
  • Using eligibility criteria
  • Certifications, notice requirements and call-in procedures to manage leave
  • Documentation
  • Reasonable Accommodations under the ADA/ADAAA
  • Alternatives to leave as tools for curbing FMLA Abuse
  • Investigations of Suspected Leave Abuse
  • Intermittent leave
  • Leave and COVID concerns
  • Legal Defenses
  • Other tools for curbing leave abuse

Why You Should Attend:

Suppose one or more of your employees has taken a leave of absence, and your company or department is buckling under the added stress—and you suspect that one or more of those employees may be taking advantage, and may not really be in need of family or medical leave – or may even not be entitled to it. What if one or more of your employees asks for intermittent leave? Administration of continuous leave can be challenging enough. Intermittent leave presents its own administrative challenges. With the continuing pandemic, more employees are in need of or looking for time off from work. How do you keep track of everything and ensure that your employees are abusing their leave? You can curb employee leave abuse. But how do you do it? Don’t despair!

This webinar will help you get a working knowledge of how you can minimize your company’s exposure to employee abuse of family and medical leave – be it under the FMLA, ADA, or workers’ comp. or other applicable family and medical leave laws.

Who Should Attend:

  • Business Owners
  • H.R. Managers and Directors
  • H.R. Generalists
  • Leave Administrators
  • Benefits Administrators
  • CEO’s
  • Senior Managers
  • Front-Line and Middle Managers

Note: You will get access to the Recording link and E-Transcript; in your account and at your registered email address.

Leave Abuse under FMLA, ADA and Workers’ Comp: How Employers Can Deal with the Most Outrageous ExcusesJanette Levey Frisch has over 20 years of legal experience, more than 10 of which she has spent in Employment Law. It was during her tenure as sole in-house counsel for a mid-size staffing company headquartered in Central New Jersey, with operations all over the continental US, that she truly developed her passion for Employment Law.

Course Information

  • January 18, 2022
  • Available All Day
  • 90 Minutes
  • Janette Levey Frisch