MN-1 DMAT thanks all employers of team members who allow there employee's to participate as members of this team. The work we do while we're deployed on missions, as well as time spent training for deployment, is vital to our nation's recovery from natural or manmade disasters.
Without your support MN-1 DMAT would not be able to fulfill its mission to provide medical support to our community, region or nation in times of need.
As an employer, or team member, you may have questions regarding your rights and the laws governing deployment and training. Your questions can be addressed to:
Kevin NagelDirectorVeterans' Employment and Training ServiceU.S. Department of Labor651-296-3665 or Nagel.Kevin@dol.gov
SUNRISE, Fla., Jan. 11, 2006 -- For the second
consecutive year, U.S. employers have new USERRA
responsibilities regarding employees who take
military leave from their jobs.
In December 2004, President Bush signed into law
a USERRA amendment that requires employers -
small or large, public or private - to give
employees notice of their job and health
insurance protections if they enter or return
from military service.
On Dec. 19, 2005, the federal Department of
Labor issued a USERRA "final rule" that now
requires employers to officially inform
employees who are members of the National
Disaster Medical System (NDMS) that they also
have such employment and insurance protections.
This mandate takes effect Jan. 18, 2006.
NDMS is an asset-sharing program among federal
agencies, state and local governments, private
businesses and civilian volunteers. It provides
medical resources after a disaster that
overwhelms local health care providers.
What Employers Need to Know About USERRA
USERRA - the Uniformed Services Employment and
Reemployment Rights Act - was enacted in 1994 to
protect the workplace rights of employees who
take leave for active-duty military service.
But, as the labor law experts at Sunrise-based
G.Neil Inc. caution, the recent revisions to the
law have created additional compliance
obligations for employers.
"USERRA applies to all employers due to the
anti-discrimination provision of the law, which
prohibits discrimination against applicants and
employees on the basis of their military status
or affiliation," explained Ashley Kaplan, head
of the G.Neil legal team.
"Don't make the mistake," she stressed to
employers, "of thinking USERRA doesn't apply to
you because you don't have any employees who are
currently in the uniformed services. You could
have some tomorrow, so you need to be informed."
Make Sure You Know the Basics
"Because USERRA provides employment protections
for active-duty military personnel, it
simultaneously limits an employer's freedom to
hire or promote employees," Kaplan noted.
G.Neil's legal team advises employers to be
aware of these other USERRA basics:
Employment Rights: In general, an employee
returning from military duty is entitled to
reemployment in his or her former position - or
one of comparable seniority, status and pay -
unless conditions in the workplace have changed
so radically that reemployment would be
"impossible" or "unreasonable."
The Escalator Principle: When reemployed, the
returning workers are to be placed on the
seniority scale not just at the place where they
left but in the position they most likely would
be if they had stayed on the job.
Vacations and Benefits: If you grant vacation
days based on years of service, a returning
soldier's benefit must be calculated as if he or
she never left.
G.Neil, which has specialized in labor law and
human resource solutions for more than 16 years,
offers numerous tools to help employers meet
their HR challenges, including its USERRA
Comprehensive Kit to assist with compliance. For
more information or to request a catalog, call
toll-free 1-800-999-9111 or visit
http://www.gneil.com.
For more information, contact:
Ashley Kaplan
954-514-2311
MN-1 DMAT members, as well as all other members of the National Disaster Medical System are considered to be part of the Uniformed Services and are covered under the following PUBLIC HEALTH SECURITY AND BIOTERRORISM PREPAREDNESS AND RESPONSE ACT.
For more information on this Public Law please copy and paste the following web address to your internet browser.
http://frwebgate.access.gpo.gov/cgi-bin/getdoc.cgi?dbname=107_cong_public_laws&docid=f:publ188.107
PUBLIC HEALTH SECURITY AND BIOTERRORISM
PREPAREDNESS AND RESPONSE ACT OF
2002
[[Page 116 STAT. 594]]
Public Law 107-188
107th Congress
An Act
To improve the ability of the United States to prevent, prepare for, and respond to
bioterrorism and other public health emergencies. <<NOTE: June
12, 2002 - [H.R. 3448]>>
``(3) Employment and reemployment
rights.--
``(A) In general.--Service as an intermittent
disaster-response appointee when the Secretary activates
the National Disaster Medical System or when the
individual participates in a training program authorized
by the Assistant Secretary for Public Health Emergency
Preparedness or a comparable official of any Federal
agency specified in subsection (b)(2)(B) shall be deemed
`service in the uniformed services' for purposes of
chapter 43 of title 38, United States Code, pertaining
to employment and reemployment rights of individuals who
have performed service in the uniformed services
(regardless of whether the individual receives
compensation for such participation). All rights and
obligations of such persons and procedures for
assistance, enforcement, and investigation shall be as
provided for in chapter 43 of title 38, United States
Code.
``(B) Notice of absence from position of
employment.--Preclusion of giving notice of service by
necessity of Service as an intermittent disaster-
response appointee when the Secretary activates the
National Disaster Medical System shall be deemed
preclusion by `military necessity' for purposes of
section 4312(b) of title 38, United States Code,
pertaining to giving notice of absence from a position
of employment. A determination of such necessity shall
be made by the Secretary, in consultation with the
Secretary of Defense, and shall not be subject to
judicial review.
``(4)
Limitation.--An intermittent disaster-response
appointee shall not be deemed an
employee of the Department of
Health and Human Services for
purposes other than those
specifically set forth in this
section.
For more information on USERRA, interested
parties may go to the U.S. Department of Labor's USERRA Advisor Home Page at the
following link:
http://www.dol.gov/elaws/userra.htm
© Copyright 2008
Minnesota-1 Disaster Medical Assistance Team.
All rights reserved.