Duke Today about HR | ask HR | contacts | managers | site index | forms
Duke provides Family and Medical Leave (FML) to assist staff in their efforts to balance the operational needs of the workplace with personal needs. Duke’s policy is intended to complement leaves under applicable federal and/or state laws.
For more detailed information, please see Work Absences: Leaves of Absence.Description
Time off (consecutive days or intermittent) is available for personal serious illness; births and adoptions; the care of a child, parent, spouse or registered same-sex partner with a serious health condition; or to care for injured or ill service member (Military Family Leave).
Eligibility
FML entitles eligible staff to unpaid time away from work for up to a total of 12 weeks within a rolling 12-month period. FML may be taken for the following reasons:
During the leave period, the position is held for the staff member’s return. However, staff must have been employed for at least 12 cumulative months and must have worked for at least 1,250 hours during the 12-month period prior to the leave. The 12 months during which the staff member must have been employed do not have to be consecutive.
Note: The use and interpretation of the word "family" as stated herein is applicable only to the "Family and Medical Leave" segments of this manual.
Request for Leave
Use of Accrued Time
Any accrued time in the form of vacation, sick leave, discretionary/designated holidays, or Paid Time Off (STB/LTB/COB) may be used at the staff member’s discretion prior to taking an unpaid leave of absence. However, use of accrued time will not lengthen the duration of the leave.
Job Guarantee*
At the end of the Family Medical Leave period (12 weeks) or at the end of the Military Family Leave period (26 weeks), the staff member will normally return to his or her former position. However, if during the leave, Duke was required to fill this position for operational reasons, the employing department will be responsible for placing the returning staff member in a position of equal status and pay.
*Under the FMLA, “key employees” may be excluded if restoring their job would represent a grievous economic injury to the company. A “key employee” is defined as an employee among the highest paid (10% of all employees of the company).
Additionally, there may be other circumstances when a regular hourly-paid staff member may not be reinstated. Such would be the case if the staff member would have been laid off whether he or she was on family medical leave or not.
Benefits Continuation
Duke will continue to pay the employer's share of the cost of health care premiums during the leave period (12 or 26 weeks).
The staff member should contact the Benefits Office at 684-5600 to determine the procedure for payment of his or her share under group insurance plans should he or she go on unpaid status.Vacation, Sick Leave, Holiday, and PTO Accrual
Vacation, sick pay, holidays, and PTO will not accrue during any period of unpaid leave.
Continuous Service Credit
Length of service accrual is continuous during the leave.
Further Information and Available Forms
Please contact Duke’s Staff & Labor Relations office at 684-2808 (P.O. Box 3904, 1527 DukeSouthClinicBuilding, Durham, NC 27710) or the Leaves of Absence web site for detailed information on procedures and forms.Staff may take leaves intermittently or on a reduced schedule because of a serious or chronic health condition of their own, a family member’s, or for Military Family Leave. Health care provider verification is needed when using intermittent leave for a serious or chronic health condition. With a supervisor's agreement, such schedules may also be arranged because of a birth, adoption, or foster care placement.
For an intermittent leave or a leave on a reduced schedule, there must be a medical need for the leave – as distinguished from voluntary treatments and procedures – such that the medical need can be best accommodated through an intermittent or reduced-leave schedule. Staff needing such schedules must attempt to schedule their leave so as to create minimum disruption to the department's or unit’s operations. Only the amount of leave actually taken is counted toward the 12 weeks of FML. Where a staff member normally works an abbreviated or part-time schedule, the amount of leave to which the staff member is entitled is determined on a pro-rata basis.
For example:
If a staff member works 30 hours per week, he or she is entitled to a prorated total of 12 weeks of FML in a fiscal year [or 360 hours (30 x 12 = 360)]. If a staff member works 20 hours per week, he or she is entitled to a prorated total of 12 weeks of FML in a fiscal year [or 240 hours (20 x 12 = 240)].
Any intermittent leave or leave on a reduced schedule must be charged against the total hours to which a staff member is entitled in a given 12-month rolling period.
In the case of monthly-salaried staff who take FML intermittently or on a reduced-leave schedule, the staff member and supervisor must agree on the staff member’s normal schedule or average hours worked each week so as to determine the amount of leave to which the staff member is entitled. The actual number of hours is calculated as indicated in the example above. The supervisor must put the agreement in writing and maintain the document in accordance with FML recordkeeping requirements.
A staff member may be temporarily transferred to an alternative position with equivalent pay and benefits in order to accommodate better the recurring periods of intermittent or reduced-schedule leaves.
Please refer to the table below for a list of FML words and phrases and their definitions.
Child
A biological, adopted, legal ward, foster-care, step-child, or child of a person standing in loco parentis ("in place of a parent") who is under 18 years of age or over 18 but incapable of self-care because of a mental or physical disability. (Note: There is no requirement that the child live with the staff member or be a legal dependent of the staff member.)
Spouse
A husband or wife as defined by North Carolina state law.
Registered Same-Sex Partners
Two individuals of the same sex who live together and are registered with the Duke Benefits Office as being Same-Sex Spousal Equivalents.
Parent
A biological parent, adoptive parent, step-parent, or an individual who stands inloco parentis to a child.
Intermittent Leave
Leave taken in separate blocks of time due to a single illness or injury as opposed to a leave taken in one continuous period of time. “Intermittent Leaves” may be taken in hours, days, or weeks.
Reduced-leave Schedule
A leave schedule that reduces a staff member’s regularly scheduled number of working hours per workweek or workday.
Serious Health Condition
An illness, injury, impairment, or a physical or mental condition resulting in either:
Note: A chronic health condition also qualifies as a serious health condition even if a staff member or family member does not receive treatment and if it does not last three days (for example: asthma or severe morning sickness).
Caution: Unless complications arise, ailments such as the common cold, the flu, ear aches, upset stomachs, minor ulcers, and headaches (other than migraines) are not considered as serious health conditions and do not qualify for FML.
Covered Servicemember
Servicemember who is recovering from a serious illness or injury sustained in the line of duty on active duty.
Eligible Employee for Military Medical Leave
Spouse, son, daughter, parent, or next of kin of covered servicemember.
Continuing Treatment by Health Care Provider
A serious health condition involving continuing treatment by a health care provider who must provide:
Health Care Provider
A doctor of medicine or osteopathy who is authorized to practice medicine or surgery (as appropriate) by the state in which the doctor practices. For example, this may also include podiatrists; dentists; clinical psychologists; optometrists; chiropractors (limited to treatment consisting of manual manipulation of the spine to correct a subluxation as demonstrated by an x-ray as existing); nurse practitioners and nurse-midwives who are authorized and are performing under the scope of their practice as defined under state law; clinical social workers; and Christian Science practitioners listed with the First Church of Christ, Scientist in Boston, Massachusetts (any additional certification may be required).
Also included in this category are health care providers who practice outside of the United States and any other health care providers from whom the Duke-group health care benefits manager will accept as certified for treating serious health conditions that warrant benefit claims.Please refer to the table below for information concerning Family and Medical Leave Actions.
|
FML Action |
Department Head or Supervisor |
Staff Member |
|---|---|---|
| Notification and Inquiry | It is the supervisor's responsibility to inquire sufficiently about a staff member’s request for extended time away. If the staff member chooses not to tell the supervisor what the nature of the request is, the supervisor should contact Employee Occupational Health and Wellness (EOHW) to ensure certification of the necessity of the leave.
If the leave has already begun, the supervisor must mail the form to the staff member. If there is any change in the information contained on the form, the supervisor must update the form and return it to the staff member within a reasonable period of time. |
To help balance the personal needs of the staff member and the business needs of the department or unit, the staff member should – in foreseeable situations – make every effort to provide the supervisor with at least thirty days written notice.
When unforeseen events require FML, staff must give as much notice as possible. Notice may be given either in person or by phone when medical emergencies are involved and may be given orally by the staff member’s family member. |
| Application | Application for Family and Medical Leave is made through the department head and/or entity or department Human Resources representative of the Staff & Labor Relations office at 684-2808 (P.O. Box 3904, 1527 Duke South Clinic Building, Durham, NC27710) with a Leave of Absence Request Form.
· It is not necessary that a Payroll Leave Form be processed if the staff member requests a leave of less than four weeks. · It will be, however, the responsibility of the department to keep accurate records of the amount of leave time taken and to make sure that the staff member understands that his or her 12 weeks has begun to count toward the rolling, 12 months. |
In order to take a leave, a staff member is responsible for providing his or her supervisor with Health Care Provider Information Certification from a physician. This information is to include the following:
· The date on which the serious health condition commenced. · The probable duration of the condition, · The appropriate medical facts. · Certification that the staff member is unable to perform the functions of his or her position – or in the case of the serious illness of a family member – that the staff member is needed to care for the family member. |
|
Paid or Unpaid FML |
The supervisor is to review the staff member’s accrued and unused time off (vacation, sick leave and/or holidays) in order to clarify what is available to the staff member.
If the staff member chooses to use accrued time off, the supervisor is to ensure that the staff member’s time-reporting documents are accurate and complete. |
The staff member is responsible for deciding whether to use any accrued and unused time off (vacation, sick leave, and/or holidays) prior to taking an unpaid leave of absence.
The staff member should inform his or her supervisor in writing about the decision. |
| Return to Work – Job Held | Periodically, a supervisor is expected to check in with the staff member on leave to report his or her status and intention to return to work.
If the staff member informs the supervisor that he or she: · intends to return to work, the staff member should provide the supervisor with written documentation informing of the date of return to work. · does not intend to return to work – thus giving the supervisor the right to terminate the employment relationship and, in so doing, end the staff member’s family medical leave after the staff member is notified in writing. |
Upon expiration of the leave, it will be the staff member’s responsibility to notify the department to schedule his or her return to work. Should the staff member fail to do this, his or her job can be filled by a regular staff member according to standard procedure.
If the FML requested is for the staff member’s own serious health condition, he or she may be required to present medical certification upon return stating that he or she is able to return to work to perform the functions of the job. |
| Return to Work – Job Not Held | A staff member returning from an extended leave (in excess of 12 weeks) whose job has not been held may apply for a transfer through the Recruitment Office. The Recruitment Office will refer the staff member to position openings for which he or she is qualified. | A staff member returning from an extended leave whose job has not been held, may apply for a transfer through the Recruitment Office. The Recruitment Office will refer the staff member to position openings for which he or she is qualified. |