Attendance Management Programs: Keeping the Wolf at Bay (Professional Relations Services)
Rather than addressing job-related issues (excessive workload, large class sizes, poor management techniques) that may be contributing to absenteeism, Ontario school boards have decided to “assist” their employees by implementing attendance management programs (AMPs). But behind the seemingly benign face of a board’s AMP lurks a wolf whose intent may be far from harmless. It is important to know your rights when confronted by this wolf.
What is an AMP?
The term attendance management program encompasses a diverse range of activities used by employers to manage workplace attendance. AMPs monitor “innocent” absenteeism – absences caused by factors outside the employee’s control (e.g., illness, injury, transportation breakdown, family problems). AMPs generally consist of progressive degrees of intervention with the goal of improving the attendance of employees who exceed a certain threshold of absenteeism.
School boards claim that AMPs are nondisciplinary and a benevolent way of ensuring ailing teachers get the support they need. However, ETFO members report experiencing stress, intimidation, lowered morale, and a sense that their privacy is under assault during their encounters with AMPs. For some, particularly those with disabilities, chronic health conditions, and child care or elder care issues, the increasingly intrusive scrutiny traps them in the jaws of a predatory program that can conclude in termination of employment.
ETFO’s concerns
AMPs were developed without consultation with or input from unions and employee groups. The number of absences that activate scrutiny is arbitrary and varies from board to board – in one board, it may be 10 absences during a school year, while in another it takes 20 absences before an employee is contacted. Because school boards have been reluctant to share their data, it has been difficult to determine how they are compiling information about absences or whether the data they are using are relevant. It’s impossible to know whether, for example, a board is counting partial days of absence as full days or including injuries sustained at work.
ETFO has learned that some managers of these programs lack the experience and training necessary to counsel members in an appropriate and sensitive manner. They are not informing ETFO members of their right to union representation during the AMP process, and are asking unnecessarily personal and intrusive questions about medical history, home life, and lifestyle choices.
You do not lose all your privacy rights simply because you are absent from work
Although it’s generally permissible for employers to expect regular attendance and to monitor the use of sick days, there are restrictions on the degree of scrutiny they can use. In most cases, the employer is limited to receiving only enough information to confirm that there is a medical issue that justifies an absence from work or that confirms the requirement to accommodate a disability. Employees are not required (and should not) supply information to an employer about medical history, test results, medical conditions not directly related to the absence, or the names of treating physicians. An employer is not entitled, in most circumstances, to ask an employee to reveal the name of their illness or the nature of their disability. Contact the federation as soon as possible if you receive such a request.
Disabilities must be considered
AMPs must operate within the confines of Ontario’s human rights legislation; so, for example, employers cannot treat workplace absenteeism of employees with disabilities or chronic medical conditions in the same way as they do the absenteeism of the rest of the workforce. School boards have a legal duty to accommodate persons with disabilities and recurring illnesses, to the point of undue hardship.
The courts and human rights tribunals have agreed that applying the same attendance expec tations to disabled and non-disabled employees is discriminatory because disabled employees are more likely to end up progressing through the levels of the AMP. Courts and human rights tribunals have also determined that AMPs must
- adhere to the Ontario Human Rights Code, privacy legislation, and collective agreement provisions
- safeguard the privacy and confidentiality of an employee’s medical information
- avoid including in an employee’s absenteeism rate absences due to workplace injury, pregnancy, and holy day leaves
- use a flexible and nonpunitive approach to attendance management that takes into account personal circumstances, family status, or disability.
Know your rights
ETFO collective agreements provide members with paid sick days. Members may use sick leave in accordance with the provisions of those collective agreements. These sick days recognize that teachers are exposed to many germs and can pass on their own germs to many others. Remember SARS? The avian flu? Public health officials tell us, “if you are sick, stay home.” At the same time, keep in mind that innocent absenteeism can result in job loss, so be cautious when board personnel ask you how you are using sick leave. You are advised to
- keep records of absences and ensure that the board’s record is accurate
- contact your local president or the provincial office as soon as possible if a board staff member asks you about your use of sick days
- safeguard your right to privacy by not disclosing more medical information than an employer is entitled to receive
- consult with ETFO before signing any document related to your use of sick days
- refrain from signing open-ended authorizations allowing a school board to obtain personal medical information
- attend any meeting about absenteeism accompanied by a local or provincial ETFO representative
- politely excuse yourself from meetings that unexpectedly turn out to be about your use of sick days and state that you would like the meeting postponed until federation advice and/or representation is available.
Becoming familiar with your legal rights, your human rights, and your collective agreement entitlements is critical, given the potentially serious consequences of workplace absenteeism. Forewarned is forearmed when the goal is to keep the AMP wolf at bay.