Duke Today about HR | ask HR | contacts | managers | site index | forms
All of Duke's entities, schools, and departments should establish guidelines and procedures regarding attendance, tardiness, scheduled and unscheduled time off, and the requisite notification procedures for requesting these periods of leave. These procedures should be communicated and discussed regularly with all staff.
All supervisors are responsible for approving time off, and both supervisors and staff are expected to work together to schedule periods of leave from Duke. If a staff member is unable to report to work because of illness or other causes, he or she must notify their supervisor according to department notification procedures. Staff must inform their supervisor prior to an expected absence or tardiness.
Definition: An absence for which the staff member has notified the supervisor in advance and has obtained approval to be away from or late to work.
This form of time off includes absences such as vacations, holidays, personal days, medical or dental appointments, bereavement leaves, and military leaves and is understood as any absence from work that is authorized by the supervisor.
Definition: Time away from work that is not approved in advance by a supervisor.
Unscheduled time off may be for a full shift and/or day, multiple shifts and/or days, or a portion of a shift and/or day.
Duke’s standards for attendance include the following guidelines:
Excessive unscheduled absences will result in counseling and/or corrective action. Such staff may also face termination.
Duke defines "tardiness" as a staff member’s absence from his or her workstation at the scheduled start time - such as at the beginning of the shift, when returning late from breaks, or early departures from work. Unless prior authorization has been received from the supervisor, tardiness also includes failure to report back to work or failure to remain at work during one’s scheduled working time for that day.
Tardy Standards and Guidelines
Duke’s standards for tardiness include the following conditions and guidelines:
With prior supervisor approval, staff may extend a normal workday to make up for a tardy.
Staff who are aware that they will be absent from work should adhere to the following guidelines:
Supervisors should adhere to the following guidelines to ensure staff understand the attendance standards as well as the implications for not meeting those standards:
A staff member's failure to provide proper notification to his
or her supervisor of an unscheduled time off (in accordance with
department guidelines) will be considered as grounds for corrective
action. This may also cause a staff member to go uncompensated for
such an absence.
See Attendance Corrective Action Guidelines and 12-Month Rolling Period for more information.
If a staff member has no instances of unscheduled time off or tardiness in the six-month period following a formal corrective action for attendance, all previous attendance-related corrective actions (including any previously unscheduled absence and tardiness) will be removed from his or her department file. This is called the redemptive clause.
For example, if a staff member has a "Final Written Warning" for unscheduled time off and he or she does not have any additional instances of unscheduled time off during the six-month period, the corrective action will be removed. The same logic holds for a corrective action based on instances of tardiness. The corrective action and all occurrences will be removed.
Staff returning to work following an absence due to illness may be required to provide a health care provider's certificate releasing the staff member to return to work.
Consecutive absences of three (or more) workdays will be considered as job abandonment and will result in voluntary termination if - prior to the end of the staff member's third scheduled work day - the staff member does not contact his or her supervisor (or department) in accordance with department procedures.