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The Right to Be Healthy: Supreme Court Weighs Sick Leave for State Workers
One day in August 2007, Daniel Coleman, an administrator in the Maryland court system, decided he should stay home to recover from an illness, as his doctor had ordered. But the day after he requested time off, he suddenly had more to worry about than his health; he was unemployed, too.
In many industrialized countries around the world, taking time off from work to deal with a medical issue isn't just a benefit; it's considered an entitlement, as much as an eight-hour day. But in the world's richest nation, a worker who claims that right has had to appeal to the highest court in the land.
So the Supreme Court will now weigh the rights of public employees to seek justice under the Family and Medical Leave Act (FMLA). The case, Coleman v. Maryland Court of Appeals, is based on Coleman’s lawsuit alleging that he was unfairly terminated following a dispute with his supervisor over leave time. Pitting Coleman, together with many civil rights advocates, against Maryland and 26 other states, the central question is whether a state can be held accountable under the law as a private employer would.
The FMLA basically allows workers to take 12 weeks of unpaid time off to deal with either a personal or family health concern. Although a worker at a private company can clearly sue for monetary damages if she is fired for taking time off for pregnancy or to care for a sick child--some courts have ruled differently for state workers' rights. A lower court found that Maryland is shielded from legal liability in this case under the Eleventh Amendment sovereign immunity clause.
The issue before the Court isn't just a question of workers’ medical rights when they fall seriously ill, but of the state’s obligation to to its employees. Gender matters, too; the FMLA, under the Equal Protection clause, was designed to counter employment discrimination based on women’s medical issues, like childbirth. (But the "self-care" provision in the Coleman case covers both men and women.)
A coalition of groups, including the National Partnership for Women & Families, unions, and the ACLU, argued in a friend-of-the-court brief:
The FMLA’s leave provisions and job protections would be rendered meaningless unless eligible employees – including those who work for state governments – can request and take leave without fear of reprisal.
The Partnership noted, "Retaliation against employees who assert their entitlement to federally protected leave is woefully common." In a similar recent case, Larry McKlintic was dismissed from his job with the government of Missouri "after he requested time off for back surgery."
According to federal labor enforcement data for 2001 to 2008, employees have brought hundreds of complaints annually for violations such as unfairly discriminating against or terminating workers who are entitled to leave, or refusing to restore them to a comparable position afterwards.
On an individual level, the threat of retaliation from a boss over medical issues may endanger job security or put a worker's health at risk. But it also leads to a culture of silence at a workplace, broadly deterring people from standing up to abuse or calling out bad working conditions.
The FMLA is just one piece of the debate. While it protects unpaid leave, there is no such federal guarantee of paid medical leave. This benefit remains inaccessible to a huge portion of the workforce, despite evidence that it has major social and economic benefits, particularly for working women. By contrast, workers in Europe often enjoy offer far more generous leave policies.
The lack of comprehensive paid leave policies aggravates inequality in the workforce. Human Rights Watch pointed out in a 2011 study, “Roughly two-thirds of civilian workers have some paid sick leave, but only about a fifth of low-income workers do. Several studies have found that the number of employers voluntarily offering paid family leave is declining.”
Sarah Crawford, director of workplace fairness at the National Partnership for Women & Families told In These Times:
At stake in this case is the ability of millions of state workers around the country to effectively exercise their rights to take self-care leave under the FMLA — that means to care for their own serious medical conditions, including pregnancy or recovery from childbirth. Without potential liability for monetary damages for violating the FMLA, there is little to deter states from violating the law.
Crawford added that the issues in the case also tie generally into state employees' rights to seek redress under federal labor law.
The Coleman case comes amid a growing climate of hostility toward public workers. The past several months have seen a cascade of attacks on the collective bargaining rights of public workers. A law to strip down union rights in Wisconsin has sparked a massive recall election campaign. Conservatives in Ohio and New Hampshire have pushed similar measures to weaken labor’s clout in public agencies. With the “right-to-work” mantra steadily creeping into the discourse of the presidential race, unions nationwide are under siege.
Daniel Coleman thought he was just asking for time off from work, but he got a lot more than he expected. First, he was punished with economic hardship, and today, he represents countless public workers who can't afford another assault on their health.




18 Comments so far
Show AllIn every institution, organization or formal group there are written and unwritten rules. They are usually at odds with each other. People who play by the rules, lose and people who excel by the unwritten rules, succeed. This is how organizational shit (I mean cream) rises to the top. This is how all human institutions are reduced to extortion rackets. This is why our society is dysfunctional.
Considering the way this court has ruled so far, they'll probably wipe out another hundred precedents and rule that it's at the discretion of the head of businesses, or that sick leave isn't a right, and this guy has no case; or they'll weaken the whole issue of sick leave enough so the wrecking crew of the tea baggers can finish the demolition.
this is sickening!
it is very simple
it is a fool who goes to the corrupt legal system for justice but that's another story
the rich have a simple, straighforward policy towards the working people of this country and it can be summed up in the immortally repugnant phrase: fuck 'em
or as p t barnum once observed: never give a sucker an even break
which of course is a variation on: fuck 'em
they guy is sick: fuck 'em
the guy wants time to spend with his family: fuck 'em
the guy wants healthcare: fuck 'em
the guy wants to earn a decent living: fuck 'em
the guy wants to provide for his family: fuck 'em
the guy wants a retirement: fuck 'em
that is why we are so fucked these days
so fucked...
that shit's fucked up
Fuck yeah!
Five of the current Supreme Courts justices would be quite happy to lurch the USA back to the 19th Century in almost every way imaginable.
with no habeas corpus you're back to the 13th already.
I'm really seeing this reverse time travel thing, like for real. Okay stone age, here we come!
And the other will sheepishly follow.
I think you need to read the articles. This really has almost nothing to do with his right to take time off for his medical needs and everything to do whether or not he can sue the state for punitive monetary damages.
"Maryland argued that employees like Coleman should instead obtain a court order directing the state to comply with the federal act and possibly reinstating them to their job. But Coleman's lawyer, Penn State professor Michael Foreman, argued that without the threat of money damages, states wouldn't be very motivated to comply."
Seems to me this administrator of a state court and his attorney are seeking a windfall monetarily, not his reinstatement. 1.1 million dollars seems a bit exhorbitant for the treatment of hypertension and diabetes. Members of my family that suffered from these conditions did it as outpatients while they continued to do the duties of their jobs.
Oh, lord. If the Corporate Supreme Kock gets to weigh on that issue, they'll probably decide that getting sick on the job is an act of corporate terrorism.
How can the US public consider they live in a developed country? Health care and sick leave are essential if anyone is to have a chance of being healthy and remaining so, while working and keeping a job. Now that the US is losing freedoms and human dignity (TSA!) it seems that every aspect of normal life is being destroyed to help the rich few, the warmakers and the "lawmakers" sending people to ever more crowded prisons.
You have health care? Are you from Canada? Here in America we have health insurance, for some, the rest can just die, watch the the republicans laugh at the people without insurance as they die in the ditch after an accident, or laugh at a migrant worker that has no insurance as she dies outside the emergency room door.
Now that the republican Roberts court says corporations are people, can corporations call in sick?
Perhaps you should learn how to read, Michelle, instead of just ranting.
The issue at SCOTUS is clearly phrased in the filings, as usual.
"Whether Congress constitutionally abrogated states' Eleventh Amendment immunity when it passed the self-care leave provision of the Family and Medical Leave Act."
It is an issue of federalism vs states rights, IOW the limits on the federal government's power over the states. It doesn't have one single tiny little thing to do with sick days.
Read your own links, maybe you'll learn something.
And it also appears to be not about sick leave or that he can have his job back, but whether or not he's allowed to sue for monetary damages.
" But the state of Maryland and Coleman disagree about the remedy workers should have if a state violates the part of the law that lets employees take leave for their own health issue.
Coleman argues that he and some 5 million state workers like him should be able to sue for money damages in such an instance. Maryland and 26 other states disagree. They acknowledge they're bound by the Family and Medical Leave Act and must grant time off. But the states say that unlike private employers, states are protected by the Constitution from monetary damage suits that could drain a state's finances."
If 5 million state workers all sued the state for 1.1 million in damages I would think the state would be bankrupted.
“If 5 million state workers all sued the state for 1.1 million in damages I would think the state would be bankrupted.”
-Then maybe they would act right in the first place!