Sick workers can be a huge liability to the health and productivity of an entire company. But can an employer force sick employees to go home?
Working while sick is a common issue for many businesses, especially as the cold and flu season ramps up. A recent Staples survey found that “nearly 90 percent of office workers” showed up to work even when they knew they were contagious, The Huffington Post reports.
How should a small business handle sick employees, and can you require that sick employees go home?
Keeping Sick Employees Out of the Office
According to AccountingWeb.com, an employer should be able send his or her sniffling employee home if the employer reasonably believes that the sick employee is a health and safety risk.
The federal Occupation Safety and Health Act (OSHA) and its various state counterparts obligate employers to provide a workplace free of known hazards. Under these laws, an employer may force an employee who is visibly ill — and potentially contagious — to leave the workspace and not return until he or she has recovered.
Not only can an employer be required under OSHA to protect healthy employees from sick ones, but they must also protect sick employees who may place themselves at risk of injury or exhaustion while under the weather.
Unfortunately, in many cases, this means telling a worker to go home without being paid for that day.