Parent Literally Had Nothing to Do With Essay

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parent literally had nothing to do with a biological child in order for the child to take advantage of the Family and Medical Leave Act to care for that parent.

The family Medical Leave Act (FMLA) gives no determination that states that the known relationship or lack thereof between the child and parent will determine the child's ability to use FMLA to care for the parent. Any employee can request FMLA regardless of if the child had nothing to do at all with the biological parent. The FMLA provides the employee with up to a maximum of twelve weeks of un-paid, job-protected leave for one of the following reasons:

Care of a spouse, daughter, son or parent with serious health conditions

Due to an employee's inability to work due to a serious health condition

Placement of a child for adoption or foster care

The birth and care of a newborn child

Specific situations related to the employees, his or her spouse, or children in association of active duty.

A parent as defined under the FMLA is either the biological parent or the person who acted as the parent when the employee was a child. A son or daughter is either biological, adopted, under foster care, a stepchild, a legal ward, or any child that the employee is assuming parenting responsibility. The child must be under the age of 18 or over age 18 if, a mental or physical handicap is present. Employees are also entitled to have their benefits maintained as long as they continue to pay their portion during the leave and have the right to return to work with the same or equivalent position, and relative pay (Larson, 2011, p. 1).

2. Explain whether the size of the business can have any effect on whether Tony is eligible for family leave under the Family and Medical Leave Act.

The FMLA does not apply to every employee.
The Act does not apply to small employers, or to employees who have been hired recently. Although the exceptions to coverage are few, they are worth exploring every time an employee requests leave. In each case, there are two coverage questions. First, is the employer covered by the FMLA? Second, even if the employer generally is covered, is the specific employee who is requesting leave eligible for FMLA benefits? The questions must be considered separately, in that order. The FMLA applies only to employers who have had 50 or more full, part-time, or temporary employees on their books for 20 or more weeks during this calendar year or during the last calendar year. Once an employer has had 50 employees on its books for 20 weeks, the employer is covered by the Act -- both for this year, and for the next calendar year. This is true even if the payroll drops below the 50-employee mark during those two calendar years -- the employer is still covered until the two years expire.

There are two categories of non-eligible employees. First, employees are not covered until they have worked for the company for more than 12 months (not necessarily consecutively), and until they have worked 1,250 hours during the last 12 months. Recent hires, therefore, are not automatically covered under the FMLA - even if the company generally is. If there is any doubt about whether an employee who is requesting FMLA leave has reached this service requirement, the employer should check his length of employment before granting or denying leave. If an employer grants FMLA leave by mistake to an ineligible employee, the employer cannot change its mind once the leave has begun, the employee will be protected (Kollman & Saucier P.A., n.d., p. 1).

3. Explain whether Herman can or cannot imply that if Tony takes a leave of absence under the FMLA, he.....

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