Chicago Sun-Times

FERGUSON FINDS POTENTIAL ABUSE OF FAMILY LEAVE AT 911 CENTER

- BYFRANSPIE­LMAN City Hall Reporter Email: fspielman@ suntimes. com Twitter: @ fspielman

Last year, aldermen were told that Chicago’s 911 emergency center was still struggling to get a handle on runaway overtime because 49 percent of call takers are on “some type of” absence tied to the Family and Medical Leave Act.

Inspector General Joe Ferguson thinks he knows why: a “pattern suggestive of potential abuse” of the federal law, known as FMLA, by employees of the city’s Office of Emergency Management and Communicat­ions.

The alleged abuse by dispatcher­s and call- takers at the 911 center is contained in the inspector general’s quarterly report, released Tuesday.

According to the report, “several employees followed patterns which raised the specter of abuse, including the frequent use of FMLA leave on Fridays and Saturdays, as well as around major holidays or sporting events,” Ferguson wrote.

“As a result of [ the] findings and recommenda­tions, OEMC establishe­d a more rigorous review process for FMLA leave requests and committed to continuing to review vacation scheduling. OEMC stated it will also task supervisor­s with additional duties in the monitoring and management of problemati­c absenteeis­m or tardiness.”

FMLA entitles eligible employees to take unpaid, job- protected leave amounting to 12 work weeks in a 12- month period for specified family and medical reasons.

Eligible reasons include: the birth of and care for a newborn child within one year of birth; adoption or foster care of a child within one year of placement; care of a spouse, child or parent with a serious health condition; or the employee’s own serious health condition.

Employees also can qualify for circumstan­ces stemming from the military service of a spouse, son, daughter or parent. Covered employees also may qualify for 26 work weeks of leave during a single 12- month period to care for a member of the military who happens to be the employee’s spouse, son, daughter, parent or next of kin.

Last week, two influentia­l aldermen proposed a more generous family leave policy that would allow Chicago’s 3,182 nonunion employees to get up to 12 weeks of paidmatern­ity leave and up to four weeks of paid parental leave for the birth or adoption of a child.

Ald. Pat O’Connor ( 40th), chairman of the City Council’s Committee on Workforce Developmen­t, and Ald. Margaret Laurino ( 39th), the Council’s president pro- tem, said it’s high time the city provide top managers benefits that have become standard in private industry.

“There are really no advocates for the benefits of those individual­s like those folks that are unionized. So every once in a while, you have to look at their benefit package so you continue … to attract young profession­als looking at the benefit packages of progressiv­e companies that have much better packages than we do,” said O’Connor, Mayor Rahm Emanuel’s City Council floor leader.

For years, City Hall had no maternity policy for female employees. Instead, pregnant women had to store up unused sick days, vacation days and unpaid family leave, then rush back to work.

When Emanuel took office, one of the first things he did was order a review of employee leave policies with an eye toward offering paid maternity leave to the 10,767 women then on the city payroll.

The resolution O’Connor and Laurino introduced is more generous than the four weeks of maternity leave for regular deliveries and six weeks for cesarean sections offered by themayor.

Asked last week about 911 center absenteeis­m, O’Connor said: “There’s a difference between FMLA and having a baby. It’s tough to fake having a baby.”

 ?? SUN- TIMES FILE PHOTO ?? Inspector General Joe Ferguson
SUN- TIMES FILE PHOTO Inspector General Joe Ferguson

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