No Tags Found!

saksena_priya@hotmail.com
7

Hi,
I have a female employee who has taken her second maternity break with us in a period of 3 years and has extended her maternity break by another 3 months of unpaid leave. However, we have hired new people in the team and the position with us in not available for her to be on-boarded back post maternity break.
We would like her to resign and move on. Can we ask her to resign/ terminate her? We have paid her 3 months gross salary as per compliance during her notice period and post that she has availed 3 months of unpaid leave.
Please advise

From India, Mumbai
Dinesh Divekar
7855

Dear Priya,

There is no correlation between number of maternity breaks and a time period. Secondly, neither you can link the present maternity leave with the past maternity leave.

Occasionally complications arise during maternity and therefore, women seek extension of their maternity leave. When a woman is ready to forego her monthly salary, it shows the gravity of the situation.

To maintain the continuity of the work, you have taken her replacement. Now you wish to dispense with the woman employee. However, whether to dispense the original employee or her replacement, this decision depends on the nature of the work, her designation, performance of the employee who proceeded on the leave etc. If the woman employee is of the worker category then the things are little easy. Getting a job for the workers is not a much problem.

If you replace the employee, it will send a signal to all the employees that retention of the employee is not much important for the company. As a HR, we talk lot about "Employee Engagement". However, engagement is beyond just playing some games in the company premises. This type of decision might disengage an employee mentally. Hope you can find out the cost of the mental disengagement vis-a-vis revenue saved because of the removal of the employee.

Thanks,

Dinesh Divekar


From India, Bangalore
nathrao
3131

Some relevant section of law relevant to the case:

12. Dismissal during absence or pregnancy. -- (1) Where a woman absents herself from

work in accordance with the provisions of this Act, it shall be unlawful for her employer

to discharge or dismiss her during or on account of such absence or to give notice of

discharge or dismissal on such a day that the notice will expire during such absence, or to

vary to her disadvantage any of the conditions of her service.

(2) (a) The discharge or dismissal of a woman at any time during her pregnancy, if the

woman but for such discharge of dismissal would have been entitled to maternity benefit

or medical bonus referred to in section 8, shall not have the effect of depriving her of the

maternity benefit or medical bonus:

Provided that where the dismissal is for any prescribed gross misconduct the

employer may, by order in writing communicated to the woman, deprive her of the

maternity benefit or medical bonus or both.

(b) Any woman deprived of maternity benefit or medical bonus or both may, within sixty

days from the date on which the order of such deprivation is communicated to her, appeal

to such authority as may be prescribed, and the decision of that authority on such appeal,

whether the woman should or should not be deprived of maternity benefits or medical

bonus or both, shall be final.

(c) Nothing contained in this sub-section shall affect the provisions contained in subsection

(1).

13. No deduction of wages in certain cases. -- No deduction from the normal and usual

daily wages of a woman entitled to maternity benefit under the provisions of this Act

shall be made by reason only of –

(a) the nature of work assigned to her by virtue of the provisions contained in subsection

(3) of section 4 : or

(b) breaks for nursing the child allowed to her under the provisions of section 11.

""I have a female employee who has taken her second maternity break with us in a period of 3 years and has extended her maternity break by another 3 months of unpaid leave""

Taking second maternity break is not unauthorised.

Extension of maternity leave was on what grounds?

Any medical certificate?

Is leave paid our Unpaid?

When you talk three months addition leave,please read :

10. Leave for illness arising out of pregnancy, delivery, premature birth of child, or

miscarriage. -- A woman suffering illness arising out of pregnancy, delivery, premature

birth of child or miscarriage shall, on production of such proof as may be prescribed, be

entitled in addition to the period of absence allowed to her under section 6, or, as the case

may be, under section 9, to leave with wages at the rate of maternity benefit for a

maximum period of one month.

So take a careful decision.

Asking her to leave or forcing her to resign needs careful consideration abut legality.

From India, Pune
Kritarth Consulting
200

Dear Advise Seeker,

Your Query:------Can We Ask Her To Resign/ Terminate Her? We Have Paid Her 3 Months Gross Salary As Per Compliance During Her Notice Period And Post That She Has Availed 3 Months Of Unpaid Leave.Please Advise

Advise/Clarification: Resignation is Voluntary NEVER sought otherwise it amounts to unlawful/forceful act on the part of the Employer / the Management hence desist from doing so even thinking on that line.

Secondly, on what ground you the Employer / Management is pondering over Terminating her from Employment / Muster Roll? Is is because the concerned Woman Employee availed Maternity Leave/Facilities she is legally entitled to avail. What Notice Period you are referring to - Has she furnished a Notice to relieve her from her Duty/Employment or the Management insisted there for ( influenced or instructed or instigated as it were or in other manner whatsoever to give Notice not of her own will?

It is pertinent and expedient for you to thoroughly familiarize yourself with Provisions of the Maternity Act 1961 with subsequent Amendments and before taking any action.

Team Kritarth is as always available.

Team Kritarth,
16.6.2016

From India, Delhi
prashantmitter@gmail.co,
1

Do you know how difficult it is to manage a baby even after 3 months? Ask all the females who are married. You indicated that you have paid the wages as part of compliance only indicates that if it were not a compliance issue probably your organization would not have willingly paid for the same. Secondly since you have now taken new team members you have felt that there is no position for this employee who has gone on maternity leave. Was this inclusion of team member intentional. What if there are other female staff who would want to go on maternity leave and would want to extend due to extenuating reason, will they feel safe to go ahead on leave as there shall always be a fear in their mind if they would have a job with them when they join back from leave. What is the impact on staff when they view this. Please take a conscious decision before termination.
Termination is always easy-Retention is most difficult. If you are able to retain staff then you are practicing good HR ethics.


ANURAG LAKHOTIA
3

Dear,
Maternity leave is a statutory leave which has a legal binding, further in case of some medical issues the same is required to be further extended also.
Termination on this ground alone is non est. you should also read the penal clause of that act.
You may counsel her and get a settlement of separation done with her, but you cannot terminate her services. You should have employed other person on temporary basis knowing that she will come back.
Anurag Lakhotia
www.lexlabour.com

From India, Delhi
Shrikant_pra
264

If you terminate her services, it will be illegal. Let her join whenever she dies. But if the leave from conveyed expected date of confinement exceeds, say, four months without any medical certificate, you can write mild letter mentioning that absence beyond max limit of leave under the act may be treated as unauthorised. Depending on the response you take further actions. Please be careful of legal implications of decision you take.
From India, Mumbai
Community Support and Knowledge-base on business, career and organisational prospects and issues - Register and Log In to CiteHR and post your query, download formats and be part of a fostered community of professionals.





Contact Us Privacy Policy Disclaimer Terms Of Service

All rights reserved @ 2024 CiteHR ®

All Copyright And Trademarks in Posts Held By Respective Owners.