My lovely wife has of recently (1.5months) been diagnosed as bipolar. Between her father dying unexpectantly in Nov, then my grandfather passing christmas eve and then our house being robbed the day of my grand's funeral the stress caused her to snap. She was taken to the ER my me a about 1.5 months ago because she wasn't eating/sleeping and not in good shape here they said she was bipolar. I'm not sure of the exact date but she quit her job with ups to take a much lower paying but feel good job w/ the NC dept of labor inspecting migrant houses. She's not been there a year. Anyways she'd been seeing a pycartrist but I now doubt his abilities because we took her to Duke yesterday where she was admitted and they said the drugs she was taking at the time were not even in the right ballpark for her disorder. Her boss had told her she could take some time off unpaid to get better but today I got a call from their HR dept saying she was no longer employed and though she'll have insurance the rest of the month I'll have to enroll cobra and start paying the premiums. Can they do that? No 90 days, and no "if your not back at work by _____" also what about unpaid leave? I'm self employed and of course this is going to drain my already dry caufers, but the thing that worries me most is she lost the first job she thought she was making a difference at. My bro works for INA (huge barring manuf.) and he asked one of his HR guys and they said no way they could do that... is the state accountable to the same laws?
4/3/2007 6:16:21 PM
sent this to the HR director
4/3/2007 8:00:53 PM
Ask the legal office thing that NCSU has for students. They might know.
4/3/2007 10:58:13 PM
Dude this is horrible. I don't think they can get away with this but I am not sure. Good luck to both of you!
4/3/2007 11:01:02 PM
http://www.wral.com/5onyourside/blog/1201100/this link might have suggestions on who you can call. Hopefully, you can get your answer without having to pay for a lawyer
4/4/2007 1:52:00 PM
Somethings to consider. How long has she been employed by her employers? If it's for <12 months, she might not be eligible to take a FMLA leave.
4/4/2007 2:11:10 PM
Gov. jobs have different regulations in certain areas, but I'm not completely sure how it affects fmla.....that being said, this should be a start:
4/4/2007 2:42:04 PM
Not sure what type of employee she was (I'm a state employee at UNC), but look at the state personnel act that might have something that will help. I know my probation period was 90 days and that I could have been fired during that period of time without any reason (if a veteran/laid off employee wanted/qualified for my job I would have lost it and almost did).
4/4/2007 2:55:44 PM