As you know,  the EEOC has been attacking maximum leave provisions in leave of absence policies for quite some time.  According to the EEOC, maximum leave provisions violate the ADA. See http://blogs.duanemorrisinstitute.com/jsegal/date/201101

Now, the EEOC is going after attendance control policies. Please see summary of recent $20 million EEOC settlement with Verizon for allegedly not excluding absences covered by the ADA from its no fault attendance control policy. See http://www.eeoc.gov/eeoc/newsroom/release/7-6-11a.cfm

Employers need to take a look at their attendance control policies and consider adding a specific exclusion for absences covered by the ADA and then reviewing each absence to make sure none for which points are awarded is covered by ADA.

Employers who do not have a no-fault point system but rather have general policies on absenteeism also need to be careful to exclude any absences potentially covered by the  ADA before concluding absenteeism is excessive.   The employer may wish to document what absences it has considered—and which it did not—so that the employer can demonstrate to the EEOC or a court that it did not consider “protected” absences.

While this blog focuses on the ADA, employers must be careful not to consider absences covered by the FMLA or state leave laws as well.

This blog should not be construed as legal advice, as pertaining to specific factual situations or as pertaining to specific factual situations.