So, what is the employer's mistake?
If she wasn't paid for leave she shouldn't have been paid for and therefore, there is no deduction for said leave paid in error (because it wasn't), what is the error?
I. Haven't. Been. Able. To. Figure. It. Out. Either.Yes or no.
Has. Jill. Been. Paid. For. All. The. Time. She. Has. Worked.
Was Jill absent from work for a total of THREE DAYS or was she absent from work for a total of SIX DAYS?She SHOULD have been paid for the leave. She HAD leave available to take. That's what I tried to explain earlier that just made it more confusing.
Let me try again:
Jill took off March 18th, 19th and 20th. We have to call in and request leave stating which type of leave we wish to take, sick or annual. Supposedly she didn't ask for a particular type, so they listed her as Absent WithOut Leave, which we do NOT get paid for.
When she returned on March 23rd, she had to fill out a '71' which is a leave request. Our supervisor is supposed to turn in the 71s to payroll before the end of the pay period. He did not turn it in until the next pay period. So they basically, for lack of a better term, charged her 3 days of leave twice.
If you are in an unresolved AWOL status, any leave you take subsequent to that cannot be paid.
She should have been paid for the leave she took, and should not have been 'charged' twice for the leave.
Does any of that help at all? If you have any specific questions ask, I'll try to clarify.
Yes or no.
Has. Jill. Been. Paid. For. All. The. Time. She. Has. Worked.
Please answer the following questions with either yes or no, nothing more.
1.) Was Jill paid for the leave, regardless of what it was called? NO
2.) Is Jill having deductions taken to reimburse the employer for time they claim was paid in error? NO
3.) Is Jill currently back at work? YES
Nothing was paid in error. She missed 3 days, she was not paid for those days, she has not missed a day since and was not paid an additional 3 days the following pay period.
Her pay should have been no different from usual, except for the night differential.
Three days.Was Jill absent from work for a total of THREE DAYS or was she absent from work for a total of SIX DAYS?
I DID answer the questions. Yes and no. JUST LIKE YOU ASKED.In future, if you would answer the questions asked at the time they are asked instead of attempting to circumvent them by long involved explanations of facts that are irrelevant, it will be much easier on everyone.
Not exactly. She is supposed to be reimbursed for all SIX days. Our HR is a joke, and payroll isn't helping. Yay for federal employment.Ok - I think I may have figured this out.
The 24 hours of paid leave time that Jill received that she shouldn't have been paid for was deducted from her earnings twice, right? Once on her paycheck the week she returned, and again on the following paycheck so the employer needs to reimburse her for the second deduction and it's taking forever.
All I can suggest is that Jill speak to her HR representative and/or payroll to see if there's anyway to get this resolved sooner rather than later.
I didn't eventually answer the questions. I answered them right after you asked them. And no one has even answered the ORIGINAL QUESTIONS. Which I have come to believe is because no one is really reading the whole post.Yes, I agree that you EVENTUALLY answered them. However, if you had answered them the FIRST time they were asked, we could have avoided a lot of confusion. Instead, we were well on the second page before we had even a clue of what was going on.
The law is not going to force them to reimburse her for the time she was off unless, as I said, she has a LEGALLY BINDING AND ENFORCEABLE contract that GUARANTEES that she MUST be paid for it. If she believes that she has such a contract, she needs to show it to a local attorney. Otherwise, as already stated, she has no legal expectation under any law, Federal or state, to be paid for her leave of absence.
She does have to be paid for the time she worked. I already told you what to do for that time.