Mickey'snewestfan
DIS Veteran
- Joined
- Apr 26, 2005
- Messages
- 4,719
My son has been having medical issues off and on since March of last year, and I've needed to take a lot of time to be off with him. He's 14 so he can stay home alone for some amount of time, but all of his doctors and the therapist we consulted have all emphasized that it's not healthy for him to be home alone, in pain or feeling sick, for 8+ hours day after day. So, I have FMLA to allow me to take off time to be with him.
However, I'm running into two problems. One is that while my employer is understanding about me being out, in that they grant all my leave requests, they are less understanding about the fact that my job doesn't always get done. About 1/2 of my job involves working directly with people. There's simply no way to either do it from home. The result is that sometimes I miss deadlines, and then when I'm scrambling to make up the work, I miss other deadlines because that work got pushed back. I've gotten feedback that I may not be invited next year because I am not producing enough, and meeting deadlines, but I don't know how to solve the problem.
The other, is that my work is very chaotic about communication, which makes it really hard for me to decide when to come in. For example, on Monday, Tuesday and Wednesday of this week, my kid was at home recovering from surgery. He was in a lot of pain, and I didn't feel comfortable leaving him for longer than 5 hours or so, which means 4 hours at work. So, I decided to work from home some (which counts as leave, I don't get paid for working from home), take some actual leave (as in stay home and don't actually work, e.g. when I'm taking him in to a specialist or when I was up all night because he was so sick and I take a nap the next day) and go in for the most crucial part. So for each day, I'd look at my work plan for the day and decide. What part do I go in for, what part do I do from home (e.g. conference call into a meeting, or work on documents from home) and what part do I push back to a later day? Twice this week, I decided to go in because of a specific reason, travelled all the way in, and then learned that the meeting was cancelled, or rescheduled. On the other hand, I also made a plan to push back a piece of work, only to find out that a meeting had been scheduled that depended on the work, but no one had thought to notify me.
Anyway, I'm frustrated. Part of what is frustrating me is that there isn't really a precedent for this kind of FMLA. One reason is because most of the people I work with are teachers, and if they're out the bulk of their job is reassigned to a substitute. It's not waiting for them when they come back. In addition, even when other admin people take FMLA it's usually to have a baby so they're gone for 12 weeks straight and of course their work is reassigned. Since I'm taking a week here, and a day there, this doesn't happen for me.
I'm not sure what I'm looking for, other than stories from other people who have used it in an intermittent way, and maybe some strategies for advocating for myself.
However, I'm running into two problems. One is that while my employer is understanding about me being out, in that they grant all my leave requests, they are less understanding about the fact that my job doesn't always get done. About 1/2 of my job involves working directly with people. There's simply no way to either do it from home. The result is that sometimes I miss deadlines, and then when I'm scrambling to make up the work, I miss other deadlines because that work got pushed back. I've gotten feedback that I may not be invited next year because I am not producing enough, and meeting deadlines, but I don't know how to solve the problem.
The other, is that my work is very chaotic about communication, which makes it really hard for me to decide when to come in. For example, on Monday, Tuesday and Wednesday of this week, my kid was at home recovering from surgery. He was in a lot of pain, and I didn't feel comfortable leaving him for longer than 5 hours or so, which means 4 hours at work. So, I decided to work from home some (which counts as leave, I don't get paid for working from home), take some actual leave (as in stay home and don't actually work, e.g. when I'm taking him in to a specialist or when I was up all night because he was so sick and I take a nap the next day) and go in for the most crucial part. So for each day, I'd look at my work plan for the day and decide. What part do I go in for, what part do I do from home (e.g. conference call into a meeting, or work on documents from home) and what part do I push back to a later day? Twice this week, I decided to go in because of a specific reason, travelled all the way in, and then learned that the meeting was cancelled, or rescheduled. On the other hand, I also made a plan to push back a piece of work, only to find out that a meeting had been scheduled that depended on the work, but no one had thought to notify me.
Anyway, I'm frustrated. Part of what is frustrating me is that there isn't really a precedent for this kind of FMLA. One reason is because most of the people I work with are teachers, and if they're out the bulk of their job is reassigned to a substitute. It's not waiting for them when they come back. In addition, even when other admin people take FMLA it's usually to have a baby so they're gone for 12 weeks straight and of course their work is reassigned. Since I'm taking a week here, and a day there, this doesn't happen for me.
I'm not sure what I'm looking for, other than stories from other people who have used it in an intermittent way, and maybe some strategies for advocating for myself.