How Tyson Avoided a Legal FMLA Nightmare | Sterling Administration - FMLA (2024)

Tyson Foods is a multinational poultry, beef, and pork products company based in Springdale, Arkansas. With a total of 122,000 employees in the U.S. alone, Tyson needs to have a robust and engaged HR department that can handle the procedural “ins and outs,” including FMLA leave guidelines. This article will highlight the colossal importance of having your FMLA policies and procedures in place through a lawsuit filed against Tyson Foods by a lawfully terminated employee. Also, how Tyson’s legal team was successfully able to defend themselves against the case because of their watertight FMLA processes.

This potential nightmare scenario revolved around an employee who needed to take intermittent leaves under FMLA leave guidelines. This employee worked for Tyson from July 2016 to March 2018. The employee’s psychiatrist stated that the employee could suffer episodes of anxiety and depression lasting four to five days each, once or twice every month or two for the next 12 months.

Tyson approved the leave requests based on the certification from the employee’s psychiatrist. However, Tyson’s leave-of-absence policy required employees returning from FMLA or non-FMLA medical leave to provide a return-to-work certification from their health care provider, stating that they could resume working with or without reasonable restrictions.

After returning to work from his 10-day leave under FMLA, his psychiatrist provided Tyson with a return-to-work certificate stating that his patient could return to work without any restrictions. Tyson then obliged further leave requests from this employee from September to December 2017.

This employee then took batches of intermittent leave in both December of 2017 and then subsequently in January and February 2018. The Tyson employee legally agreed to stay within the guidelines put in place by him, his psychiatrist, and the HR department. As per the agreement, intermittent leave would be allowed for episodes lasting four to five days, once or twice every one to two months on a yearly basis.

Unfortunately, from February 12th to March 5th of 2018, this Tyson employee called the company’s attendance hotline every morning, stating that he could not work. Subsequently, on March 6th, 2018this employee physically returned to Tyson after missing 16 consecutive workdays. He provided a psychiatrist’s note to excuse the absences, but the note failed to certify whether the employee could return to work without any restrictions. The HR supervisor requested an updated return-to-work certificate as per Tyson’s defined FMLA procedures. On the same day, the employee submitted a revised leave-of-absence application for the prior time off without proper dates. Tyson then demanded that the employee provide the required certification by March 21st, 2018.

Again, this employee continued to call in sick on the corporate hotline from March 7th to March 14th of 2018. The calls by the employee stopped on the 14th and the employee’s supervisors were unable to reach him at home after several attempts. This employee claimed that he had notified personnel at Tyson that, after several attempts on his part, he was unable to reach his psychiatrist. However, the employee could not recall who he specifically spoke to or what he had stated. On top of all this, the employee failed to return an FMLA certification by March 21st, 2018. Due to internal HR policies at Tyson, Tyson was well within its rights to terminate the employment of this employee. Tyson had explicitly stated in its internal documentation that three days of absence without notice was considered abandonment, and an employee could be terminated if the said employee did not return to work by the end of an approved leave of absence.

Claiming FMLA interference, along with a multitude of other claims, the ex-Tyson employee sued Tyson. The company’s legal arm, in conjunction with its HR department, was able to turn a quick summary judgment in the district court. The employee appealed and felt that he was entitled to not rectify his leave after the 16-day absence. He claimed that he was not outside the parameters of the agreed-upon certified segments to take leave twice per month in four-to five-day increments with up to 10 days per month.

In the end, the 8th Circuit Court sided with Tyson, reaffirming that the company’s recertification request was reasonable and within its legal rights. The ex-employee’s final leave of 16 consecutive days was well beyond the agreed upon leave increments of four-to five day chunks. Because Tyson’s HR department was on top of its FMLA rights, obligations, and procedures, the legal team for the corporation was able to win its case and avoid adverse publicity along with a possible massive payday for the ex-employee.

Not all organizations have the budgetary bandwidth or seamless HR FMLA processes that can be handed off to a top legal department. Sterling Administration can help you with different facets of FMLA and navigate you through various FMLA guidelines. Sterling will help you with all of the paperwork related to FMLA and can even answer FMLA questions either via call, chat, or email.

If you’d like to learn how to successfully implement protective internal FMLA procedures, please contact Sterling at this form or the number provided below. Around 80,000 users and 1200 companies are already using different products of Sterling to safeguard their organizations in a positive, protective, and impactful way.

How Tyson Avoided a Legal FMLA Nightmare | Sterling Administration - FMLA (2024)

FAQs

How Tyson Avoided a Legal FMLA Nightmare | Sterling Administration - FMLA? ›

Because Tyson's HR department was on top of its FMLA rights, obligations, and procedures, the legal team for the corporation was able to win its case and avoid adverse publicity along with a possible massive payday for the ex-employee.

What is an example of FMLA abuse? ›

Manipulating an employee's work hours to avoid responsibilities under the FMLA, Using an employee's request for or use of FMLA leave as a negative factor in employment actions, such as hiring, promotions, or disciplinary actions, or, Counting FMLA leave under “no fault” attendance policies.

What is an example of FMLA retaliation? ›

As an example, an employer who fires an employee who just requested FMLA leave before she can take it can be sued for retaliation (because the employee requested the leave) and interference (since the termination precludes the employee from taking the required leave).

Does FMLA protect you from being fired? ›

The law prohibits employers from firing employees in retaliation for exercising their rights to use FMLA-protected leave. The law not only protects your job while you are on leave, but it also protects your job when you return to work.

What are the elements of interference in FMLA? ›

To prove interference, the employee must show entitlement to leave (and that he or she gave proper notice); that the employer took adverse action against the employee that interfered with the ability to take leave; and that the adverse action was related to the taking, or attempting to take, FMLA leave.

What is the average settlement for the FMLA lawsuit? ›

According to Guardian Life and ESIS, the average FMLA lawsuit settlement in California and the rest of the US is roughly $80,000. In more severe cases, settlements can surpass $500,00 and even $1,000,000.

What are three actions that constitute retaliation? ›

reprimand the employee or give a performance evaluation that is lower than it should be; transfer the employee to a less desirable position; engage in verbal or physical abuse; threaten to make, or actually make reports to authorities (such as reporting immigration status or contacting the police);

What makes a strong retaliation case? ›

A strong retaliation case must show three things: An employee faced discrimination or harassment in the workplace. They reported the incident. The employee was then fired, demoted or otherwise punished for their complaint.

What does FMLA discrimination look like? ›

Examples of FMLA discrimination include: Attempting to dissuade an employee from taking FMLA leave. Refusing to authorize an eligible employee's request for FMLA leave.

Can a company lay you off while on FMLA? ›

In practice, yes, it can happen. Whether or not it is legal is another matter entirely. Specifically, FMLA regulation 825.216(a) theoretically allows it, but only if your job would have been eliminated even if you had not been on FMLA leave.

Can HR tell your boss about FMLA? ›

The FMLA prohibits HR from sharing that information with department heads and supervisors, but you can rest assured that Stan's condition meets the FMLA definition of a “serious health condition” required for FMLA leave if that leave is approved by HR.

How do I protect my job with FMLA? ›

As long as you are able to return to work before you exhaust your FMLA leave, you must be returned to the same job (or one nearly identical to it). This job protection is intended to reduce the stress that you may otherwise feel if forced to choose between work and family during a serious medical situation.

What are the two categories of wrongful interference? ›

There are two types of tortious interference: tortious interference with contract and tortious interference with prospective economic advantage. Both involve situations where one party does something to intentionally undermine another party's business transactions or relationships.

What is the difference between interference and retaliation? ›

Unlike interference, which directly prevents an employee from taking family and medical leave, retaliation is a response to an employee having used those rights. Examples of FMLA retaliation include: Firing an employee for requesting or taking FMLA leave.

What is tortious interference in employment? ›

Tortious Interference in a Business Relationship

It is illegal for your former employer to interfere with your current employment efforts by doing things such as trying to “enforce” an unenforceable non-compete agreement or otherwise interfere with your business relationships.

What is a real life example of FMLA? ›

Examples: Hira's son has a chronic illness that is a serious health condition. Hira takes FMLA leave once per month to transport her 14-year-old son to his specialist's office for treatments, provide psychological comfort and reassurance, and keep him at home during recovery from the treatment's effects.

What is an example of abuse of sick leave? ›

Repeated Monday and Friday absences. Absences when a vacation request has been denied. “Seasonal absences” associated with given times of the year (e.g. hunting season) or paid holidays. Excessive use of sick leave during periods of progressive discipline or immediately prior to retirement.

What is the misuse of intermittent FMLA? ›

The most common area of intermittent FMLA leave abuse lies in the failure to provide appropriate medical documentation or to follow the terms of the existing medical certification.

Is it a Hipaa violation to say someone is on FMLA? ›

For example, most employers possess medical information for some employees related to the Americans with Disabilities Act (“ADA”) and the Family Medical Leave Act (“FMLA”). HIPAA does not regulate the employer's use and disclosure of this medical information.

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