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Here's an interesting article written by a North Carolina attorney on how to fire your employees if they go out on
Workers' Compensation. Read carefully and take notice of the techniques that they use!
Terminating an employee who has been out on Workers' Compensation leave is a high-stakes process that requires carefully
considering many factors. How well you handle it can affect your ongoing Workers' Compensation liability and could also
subject you to claims of wrongful discharge or retaliation.
It's made all the more complex by the fact that your Workers' Comp carrier's goals may conflict with yours.
The carrier generally wants to get the injured employee back to work as soon as possible. That reduces its liability for
wage benefits, temporary total or partial disability payments. As the employer, you may not want the worker back at all
for a variety of reasons: a history of poor work performance, a tendency to be accident prone (and the corresponding
likelihood that there will be another workers' comp claim) or the fact that the employee may return with work restrictions
that compromise your operations.
In short, your carrier's goals are not yours. Therefore, don't rely on any employment law advice your carrier or its
attorney may offer you.
Medical Improvement
Many Workers' Compensation rules govern an employee's return to work and the possible termination.
The employee's return to work generally follows an assessment of his or her maximum medical improvement (MMI). MMI is
the basis for deciding whether the employee is no longer disabled.
If the employee is not totally disabled, the employer will generally offer the employee suitable work. "Suitable" means
the employee can do the work considering his age, education, physical limitations, vocational skills and experience. The
job cannot be "make-work" or a job specially created for this employee. If the employee refuses suitable work, the
carrier can move to stop making temporary total or partial disability payments.
If the employee, however, can show that not accepting the offer of suitable work was reasonable, the carrier will have
to keep paying benefits.
If the employee can't show it was reasonable to turn down truly suitable work, you should be able to terminate the
employee with little risk.
Constructive Refusal Of Work
But let's say the employee does return to work, with less than complete success. How would termination work?
If the employee engages in misconduct or fails to properly perform his or her job, that may constitute a constructive
refusal of suitable employment, and the carrier can seek to terminate benefits. In such cases, you have the initial
burden of establishing that you terminated the employee for misconduct or fault, unrelated to the compensable injury for
which a nondisabled employee would ordinarily have been terminated.
Then the burden shifts to the employee to show that his inability to find or hold other employment of any kind (or work
at a wage comparable to that earned before the injury) is due to the work-related disability.
Performance & REDA
In addition to issues related to Workers' Compensation liability, there are employment law concerns.
The North Carolina Retaliatory Employment Discrimination Act (REDA) prohibits employers from retaliating against
employees in all kinds of situations, including matters related to Workers' Compensation benefits. REDA protects
employees who exercise their Workers' Compensation rights.
If an employee has Workers' Compensation protected status, you can still discharge or take other adverse employment
action. However, you must be able to prove by the greater weight of the evidence that you would have taken such action
absent the protected status.
REDA provides for an administrative process to investigate claims. An employee may initiate a proceeding by filing a
complaint with the North Carolina Department of Labor, Workplace Retaliatory Discrimination (WORD) Office.
Threat Of Civil Action
Following the administrative process, an employee can file a civil action in superior court. If the employee is
successful, the court may award the following types of relief:
In addition to a claim under REDA, a discharged employee can file a civil action in superior court for wrongful
discharge against public policy. The violated public policy is REDA's prohibition against discrimination related to
Workers' Compensation matters. The claim would be similar to a retaliation claim under REDA, but would not have the
administrative and other limitations set forth in REDA.
Employees who have pending Workers' Compensation claims commonly allege retaliatory discrimination or wrongful
termination. Thus, you must be careful when taking employment action against an employee in this protected status.
Communicate with your carrier to coordinate how you will handle those cases.
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