Yesterday after a week of severe depression episode where I ended up in the hospital they fired me. I suspected they were going to fire me (scheduled 1am call with HR) and I've decided to share with them 3 days ago my Bipolar Diagnosis. Although I wished not, I shared this this because I've read that in the US ADA would protect me and they would have to accommodate me before firing me. My performance never dropped, only my communication. I never stopped coding.
This was pure discrimination, and they got away with this because I am not us-citizen. The real relationship with them was employee and my salary was in the six figures.
Is there anything I can do? May ADA or similar act legally cover me? They are a well respected and known company. Although I may want to seek some monetary compensation for discrimination, I also am upset they did not care about my condition.
If you know a lawyer that can help me, hope this is a precedent and doesn't happen to anybody else. Mental health is health.
Wish you a healthy day.
Don't listen to people on this thread talking about "at-will employment", which (1) doesn't really apply to contractors and (2) doesn't apply to most discrimination cases, which are covered by separate laws (ADA, the Age Discrimination act, FMLA, etc).
Contractor status is one of those things you can often actually contest. Your employer referring to you as an "employee" is probably not dispositive, but there are a bunch of other tests (how much control you have over your work, etc) that an employment lawyer can walk you through.
Flip side of this: if your former employer is big and well-known, chances are they're well aware of the legal tripwires for contractors (everyone is after Microsoft infamously blew up over misclassification). Your actual contract, the one that actually got signed, probably spells out in great detail the fact that you are not a full-time employee entitled to benefits. So if it's a clueful company, it may be a steep hill to climb to argue that you were misclassified.
Terminating an employee with no previous disciplinary record right after a mental health crisis would be sketchy pretty much everywhere in the US, and most employers would be worried about legal repercussions. So it's possible that if you get a decent lawyer, you might be able to put together a nastygram that will get your former employer to cough up a settlement of some sort, rather than going to bat over your contractor status, which would be expensive for everyone.
Best of luck.
[1] - https://www.eeoc.gov/laws/guidance/depression-ptsd-other-men...
And do take care of yourself first and foremost and you can lead a decent life. So if I were you I'd pursue this thing but if nothing can be done I wouldn't sweat it and concentrate on healing, on good patters, and stability , even if it feels hard when not having a job it is possible if you make an effort.
This is of crucial importance before any reasonable answer or advice can be given. Also: if you want to get really good advice you should contact an employment lawyer in your locality.
This is our daily reminder that HR is not your friend. They will side with the company 100% of the time. They are the illusion of a union replacement, and they seriously need to be regulated.
The European governments has foreseen protections (e.g. they can't fire you when you are sick, or notice leave, etc...), but these only apply when you are an employee.
I sincerely hope though that you manage to receive a compensation for the wrongdoing they did to you. Like the other poster mentioned, maybe checking out with a lawyer in the US would be the best way to go forward.
https://askjan.org/articles/Applying-the-ADA-in-a-Global-Eco...
> To determine whether the ADA applies to employment in foreign countries, you must look at both the employee and the employer. The employee must be a U.S. citizen; foreign employees working in foreign countries have no protection under the ADA. In addition, the employer must be a covered entity (at least 15 employees) and must be of American nationality or, if foreign, controlled by an employer of American nationality.
They will almost always give you a free consultation about whether you have a claim, if nothing else.
I would not look into legal-self-help kinds of stuff until you contact a few employment attorneys and none will take your case.
> My performance never dropped, only my communication.
Unfortunately, your communication is part of your performance as a remote employee. If your communication with them diminished to the point that they were unable to communicate with you as necessary to complete your job, that's grounds for dismissal. If you continued to write and submit code while failing to acknowledge communications from the company, you may have demonstrated that you were capable of working yet avoiding communication, which is part of your job.
While I'm very sorry for your situation and I can empathize with your struggle, I have to be blunt: It's not clear that you have a valid standing here.
For future reference, any sudden absences should be communicated to your employer ASAP. You don't need to provide details. If necessary, you can have a family member send a short communication (don't provide any medical details, just explain that you are unavailable due to medical emergency) to your employer.
I would also recommend that you read up on what constitutes reasonable accommodations under the ADA. Be wary of internet sources, as this is a nuanced topic. Generally, though, these situations are more appropriate for taking leave under FMLA.
> If you know a lawyer that can help me
Again, please be careful. While it's tempting to pursue legal action, it may cost you more time and energy than you can spare to fight a battle that you are, frankly, likely to lose under the circumstances. Unless you can identify a specific legal violation (not conjecture about their motives) while covering all of your bases, it's better to focus your limited energy on returning to good health and moving on.
If you are a 1099 independent contractor, broadly there are no protections under the ADA. Only your contract controls what either party can do. If you have a contract that requires good cause to terminate or 30/60 day notice that could apply here.
If you are an employee, or misclassified as a contractor and should be an employee it is possible this was unlawful termination. Whether you would be an employee depends primarily on your job responsibilities, not what your employer decides. It is a fact specific matter, and being physically outside of the US, not a US citizen, not authorized to work in the US means it is most likely you were an contractor and not an employee.
It is also possible they are justified in firing you if you were an employee. Under the ADA the employer is required to make reasonable accommodations for a disability. But you need to request it. And if it creates an undue hardship for the employer, or you are no longer able to complete essential duties it is lawful to fire you.
Also the law is not always able to grant effective recourse. Even if the company fired you unlawfully or violated the contract, it can take too much time and money to prove what happened, you can't always put things back the way they were, if you win collecting on a judgement takes work too. But a lawyer can advise you of your rights, the realistic outcomes. In many cases if the company was legally in the wrong you can reach a settlement for severance, or can get help filing a complaint with the state department of labor. In most states you can get a free or low cost consultation with an employment attorney, and can contact the state bar for a referral if you don't know anyone to refer a lawyer.
A part of your performance might have needed the communication because as you’ve said everyone works remotely for the said company. Lack of communication can disrupt the harmony of the team that makes the company work.
I do feel for you because mental health issue isn’t something anyone should take lightly.
If you were getting fired because of your performance or lack of communication isn’t helping the company anymore without them knowing you were going through this mental health issue, is it really grounds for discrimination? From what I understand they were letting you go because of the communication not because of your mental health.
I don't know other way to get in contact with these people other than Twitter, but you should consider sending a DM to @pinboard, @popehat and @yashar. And it might be better not to read their feeds before you do.
All these ADA, HIPAA stuff are crap, the Big Brother is watching and he knows.
I hope you feel better and manage to get a job with a nicer boss.
Uhm... most of the US is at-will employment, which means they can and do terminate people at any point in time with absolutely no reason necessary what so ever.
There is 0 protection for employees in the US (in most cases).
This is not like Europe at all where there are rules around how you can fire people and legal requirements that need to be met.