I think it would depend on what kind of job setting this is. I work in an office and if there were schedule variations but she could still put in the time by either staying late or was able to fill in the gaps from home, and still get her work done, this would be no big deal. Someone that works in a hospital, for instance, where physically being there at the exact times is critical would have a different perspective. If this were an employee of mine it would also matter what "dealing with" the child meant as well.
Even in jobs that are normally flexible this can be an issue sometimes.
My job is extremely flexible. I pretty much can pick my hours within reasona nd can work from home or switch them around if I have to.
Unless this is one of those weeks where:
- There is a large customer meeting, then I have to be present
- I'm in the middle of a build, test event, or other activity that requires me to be physically present where the hardware is
We had this issue with an employee that tended to call in and work from home whenever is snowed even a little. This wasn't too big of a deal until we got to a test event that he had to be present for and at certain times. The employee ended up switching offices to one with a much better public transportation system he can use to not have to drive in snow.
