Common use of Types of Leaves of Absence Clause in Contracts

Types of Leaves of Absence. ‌ Employee Medical – for the employee’s own serious health condition, if the condition renders the employee unable to perform the employee’s essential job functions. Family Medical – to care for the serious health condition of the employee’s spouse, child, or parent (not including in-laws). Parenting – to care for a new son or daughter, including by birth or by adoption or xxxxxx care placement. Military Caregiver Leave – to care for an employee’s spouse, son, daughter, parent or next of kin who is a current member of the National Guard or Reserves and who incurs a serious injury or illness in the line of duty which may render the service member unfit to perform current military duties, for which the service member is undergoing medical treatment, recuperation, or therapy, is otherwise in outpatient status, or is otherwise on the temporary disability retirement list. Military Exigency Leave – to attend to various short-term matters requiring an employee’s attention when an employee’s spouse, son, daughter, or parent has been called to active duty or is on a Federal call to active duty, generally as a member of the reserve components of the U.S. military. Qualifying exigencies include matters such as childcare and a child’s school activities, financial or legal arrangements, attending certain counseling sessions, short periods of rest and recuperation leave from active deployment, attending certain military events such as post-deployment reintegration briefings, and any matters arising out of a short-term deployment (i.e., a deployment for which an employee’s spouse, son, daughter, or parent receives 7 or fewer calendar days of notice of the deployment).

Appears in 3 contracts

Samples: Collective Bargaining Agreement, Collective Bargaining Agreement, Collective Bargaining Agreement

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Types of Leaves of Absence. ‌ Employee Medical – for the employee’s own serious health condition, if the condition renders the employee unable to perform the employee’s essential job functions. Family Medical – to care for the serious health condition of the employee’s spouse, child, or parent (not including in-laws). Parenting – to care for a new son or daughter, including by birth or by adoption or xxxxxx care placement. Military Caregiver Leave – to care for an employee’s spouse, son, daughter, parent or next of kin who is a current member of the National Guard or Reserves and who incurs a serious injury or illness in the line of duty which may render the service member unfit to perform current military duties, for which the service member is undergoing medical treatment, recuperation, or therapy, is otherwise in outpatient status, or is otherwise on the temporary disability retirement list. Military Exigency Leave – to attend to various short-term matters requiring an employee’s attention when an employee’s spouse, son, daughter, or parent has been called to active duty or is on a Federal call to active duty, generally as a member of the reserve components of the U.S. military. Qualifying exigencies include matters such as childcare and a child’s school activities, financial or legal arrangements, attending certain counseling sessions, short periods of rest and recuperation leave from active deployment, attending certain military events such as post-deployment reintegration briefings, and any matters arising out of a short-term deployment (i.e., a deployment for which an employee’s spouse, son, daughter, or parent receives 7 or fewer calendar days of notice of the deployment).term

Appears in 1 contract

Samples: Collective Bargaining Agreement

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