Society's Child
She says just a few hours after her doctors told her employer she would need some time off for cancer treatments and surgery, they fired her.
CBS 2′s Dana Kozlov tells us why she's fighting back.
"I've been fighting for my life," said Madonia.
One thing Elisa Madonia didn't think she'd have to fight for after her cancer diagnosis was her four year job at property management company S37. She was wrong.
"Not only I'm being hit with a disease, that I have cancer, now you take my job too away from me?" said Madonia.
Madonia's ordeal began last October, right after doctors told her she had stage three esophageal cancer.
Doctors sent her employers letters about her illness and her possible need for some significant time off for chemo, radiation and surgery. Less than two hours after getting that letter, Madonia says her boss called her in to the office, suggested she resign and offered to pay six months of COBRA if she signed a separation letter. Then they terminated her. Video here.
"For the worst possible moment of her life, being diagnosed with stage three esophageal cancer, that was just the cruelest thing I ever heard," said Kathleen Derosa, Madonia's caregiver.
"I think they had an obligation to sit down with Elise and say, hey, what can we do here? Can you work three days a week? Can you telecommute for some period of time? Instead of the knee jerk reaction of firing her on the spot. That's illegal," said Eugene Hollander, Madonia's attorney.
The allegations are laid out in a disability discrimination lawsuit. In the meantime, Madonia continues to concentrate on her recovery.
S37′s attorney Brian Garelli says he hasn't seen the lawsuit so isn't able to comment.
After months of treatments, Elisa had surgery two weeks ago. She's supposed to get out of the hospital this week.
Reader Comments
Dead wrong!
The owner of that company depends on loyal employees for that profit. That works both ways. The owner has an obligation to his employees to adjust to help them through a crisis. Especially one like this.
If the owner is such a rugged individual, then let him try and run the company himself.
Sorry, but your free enterprise rant doesn't hold water, thank god.
And if the employer can't stand the heat, then get out of the kitchen.
Welcome to the 21st century.
@redrock12:
I believe Cactii was being sarcastic.
I would hope so, at this point.
ned
The employer is taking a risk by having a company and having employees. The employer should have the right to discriminate how he pleases! The employer needs to do what's best for the company and a company is there to make profit. A company is not a socialist establishment!