
heaven forbid they find out the truth! I think I would consider calling my attorney as well considering they are aware of her condition (not able to lift) and making the situation more difficult for her. That is just ridiculous! as if your poor dd doesn't have enough to worry about thanks to them
What jerks! Your dd deserves to go somewhere much better anyway! I hope the police or a call from an attorney will change their attitude! Good luck!

From what has been stated in the original thread, her DD's FMLA ran out the same day as her surgery.Wow, they terminated your daughter after surgery? Was she covered by FMLA? She may have some legal rights here that she's unaware of.
I'm sorry that she's going thru this. I wish her speed in healing.
Oh I know that it's not illegal to let someone go once it's up and they're not back at work, but she stated the termination was effective that day...which I thought couldn't happen if FMLA was still in effect (even if it's the last day of it). Of course they could just get around it by making it effective the very next day. I hate companies sometimes.OP has already noted on another thread that her DD was let go on her last day of leave, which was also the date of her DD's surgery. Since she was not able to go back to work when her leave was up - the company let her go. It stinks but it's not illegal.

The purpose is to pick the employees brain and see if there's any complaints that might lead to a law suit. Any information regarding 401K's or benefits can easily be given via a letter or a handbook. That's my opinion and I'm sticking to it.
I second this. HR works for the company, not the employees.
Brandie