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California Court Of Appeal Interprets "Kin Care" Provisions For The First Time.




In McCarther v. Pacific Telesis
For current information on this topic, see AT&T.


Pacific Telesis Group was one of the seven Regional Bell Operating Companies created after the 1984 breakup of AT&T as a holding company for Pacific Bell and Nevada Bell.
  Group, No. A115223 (May 23, 2008), a case of first impression, a California Court of Appeal held that California's kin care statute - Labor Code section 233 - applies where an employer provides employees with an indefinite number indefinite number
n.
A variable number.
 of paid sick days on an as-needed basis. In essence, the court held that whenever an employer provides paid sick leave, it must comply with kin care obligations - no matter how it structures and calculates the sick leave entitlement.

The court also considered Labor Code section 234, which regulates employer absence control policies that discipline employees for using kin care. The court held that section 234 does not require special treatment for kin care for attendance discipline purposes. As long as employers treat kin care leave the same as sick leave in terms of discipline and attendance issues, they are in compliance with the law.

Factual and Procedural Background Pursuant to a collective bargaining agreement The contractual agreement between an employer and a Labor Union that governs wages, hours, and working conditions for employees and which can be enforced against both the employer and the union for failure to comply with its terms. , the defendant employers provided their employees an indefinite number of paid sick days. Employees could receive paid sick leave every time they missed work for their own illness up to a maximum of five paid days in any seven-day period. The sickness absence policy did not contain an annual cap or limit on the total number of days that an employee could miss work with pay.

The employers also implemented an attendance management policy that counted employees' sick days as an "occurrence" unless the employee used Paid Time Off or the absence fell within certain designated types of protected leave, including Family and Medical Leave Act leave and worker's compensation leave.

Employees exceeding the number of allowed attendance "occurrences" in a 12-month period were disciplined under the employer's progressive discipline policy, which could ultimately result in termination.

In this case, the plaintiffs took leave to care for ill family members under the kin care statute but were not paid for these days. The employers argued that the kin care provisions in Labor Code 233 only applied to traditional sick leave policies where an employee accrues a fixed number of sick days over the course of a year and not where employees are allowed an indefinite number of sick days. The lower court granted summary judgment in favor of the employers.

Court of Appeal's Analysis When Leave "Accrues"

Under Labor Code section 233, an employee may use "accrued ac·crue  
v. ac·crued, ac·cru·ing, ac·crues

v.intr.
1. To come to one as a gain, addition, or increment: interest accruing in my savings account.

2.
" sick leave to care for a covered relative. The court clarified that sick leave counts as accrued leave under section 233 whenever the employee receives the right to take sick leave under the employer's policy, even if the leave did not accrue To increase; to augment; to come to by way of increase; to be added as an increase, profit, or damage. Acquired; falling due; made or executed; matured; occurred; received; vested; was created; was incurred.  over the course of the year and even if the total amount of sick leave is indefinite INDEFINITE. That which is undefined; uncertain.

INDEFINITE, NUMBER. A number which may be increased or diminished at pleasure.
     2. When a corporation is composed of an indefinite number of persons, any number of them consisting of a majority of those
.

Attendance Policies

California Labor Code section 234 provides that if an employer has an absence control policy that disciplines an employee for using kin care leave under section 233 or otherwise treats the kin care as something that could lead to discipline, the employer automatically violates section 233. The employers argued that they should not have to comply with the kin care obligations because if they applied, section 234 would prohibit pro·hib·it  
tr.v. pro·hib·it·ed, pro·hib·it·ing, pro·hib·its
1. To forbid by authority: Smoking is prohibited in most theaters. See Synonyms at forbid.

2.
 them from ever disciplining an employee for using kin care and could lead to a situation where an employee missed months of work for kin care without consequence.

The court rejected that argument. The court held that nothing in section 234 prohibits an employer from regulating kin care leave, but it only allows such regulation on the same grounds as the employer regulates regular sick leave. An employer may impose attendance penalties or discipline on employees for the use of kin care leave as long as they would impose the same penalties or discipline for regular use of sick leave. An employer only violates the law when it penalizes employees more harshly for kin care absences than for sick leave absences for an employee's own illness or injury.

Practical Implications The court's interpretation of Labor Code section 233 will have little practical affect for employers who provide their employees with a definite number DEFINITE NUMBER. An ascertained number; the term is usually applied in opposition to an indefinite number.
     2. When there is a definite number of corporators, in order to do a lawful act, a majority of the whole must be present; but it is not necessary they
 paid sick days.1 However, employers that are not currently complying with California's kin care provisions because their employees' sick leave does not accrue in increments over time or does not provide a definite amount of sick days should immediately modify their policies and practices.

The court's clarification on Labor Code section 234 will have greater impact. Many California employers have been operating under the assumption that kin care is a protected leave that must be excluded from their attendance policies in the same manner as CFRA CFRA Center For Rural Affairs
CFRA California Family Rights Act
CFRA Center for Reclaiming America
CFRA Center for Financial Research and Analysis
CFRA Cape Fear River Assembly
CFRA Cable Fire Research Association
CFRA College Football Researchers Association
 and FMLA FMLA Family and Medical Leave Act of 1993
FMLA Feminist Majority Leadership Alliance
 leave. The court opened the door for employers to impose discipline for excessive kin care absences so long as their attendance policies apply the same standards to kin care and the employee's own sick leaves of absence.

Footnotes:

1. Under current law, a private employer has no legal obligation to provide employees with paid sick leave. The California legislature is, currently, considering A.B. 2716, which would impose an obligation to provide paid sick leave to all employees in the state. Such a bill would have far reaching implications, including guaranteeing all employees at least some kin care leave.

The content of this article is intended to provide a general guide to the subject matter. Specialist advice should be sought about your specific circumstances.

Mr Daniel Cravens Cravens Railway Carriage and Wagon Company Limited was a railway car builder in Sheffield, England and supplier of the London Underground A60 Stock; and diesel multiple units and electric multiple units to British Railways.  

Littler Mendelson Littler Mendelson P.C. is a San Francisco-based law firm with one of the largest employment law practices in the United States. History and practice
The firm was founded in 1942 by a deputy Attorney General of California and a director of the War Labor Board, initially to
 

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UNITED STATES United States, officially United States of America, republic (2005 est. pop. 295,734,000), 3,539,227 sq mi (9,166,598 sq km), North America. The United States is the world's third largest country in population and the fourth largest country in area.  

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Publication:Mondaq Business Briefing
Article Type:Case overview
Date:Jun 6, 2008
Words:937
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