Earlier this month, I wrote about the ADA and hiring preferences, pointing out that the disability discrimination laws do not prevent an employer from giving a hiring preference to a disabled job applicant by creating a cause for action in favor of a non-disabled applicant or employee. What happens, however, if you are not dealing with a disabled applicant, but a disabled employee who requests a transfer to an open position a reasonable accommodation? Are you required to overlook more qualified non-disabled employees and provide the transfer as a reasonable accommodation? The ADA's regulations provide that "reassignment to a vacant position" may qualify as a reasonable accommodation. But, that statement only begs the question of whether that accommodation is mandatory for employees who can longer perform the essential functions of their jobs, or just one part of the matrix of accommodations that an employer should consider.
Monday, March 12, 2012
Reassignment as reasonable accommodation: mandatory or not?
Earlier this month, I wrote about the ADA and hiring preferences, pointing out that the disability discrimination laws do not prevent an employer from giving a hiring preference to a disabled job applicant by creating a cause for action in favor of a non-disabled applicant or employee. What happens, however, if you are not dealing with a disabled applicant, but a disabled employee who requests a transfer to an open position a reasonable accommodation? Are you required to overlook more qualified non-disabled employees and provide the transfer as a reasonable accommodation? The ADA's regulations provide that "reassignment to a vacant position" may qualify as a reasonable accommodation. But, that statement only begs the question of whether that accommodation is mandatory for employees who can longer perform the essential functions of their jobs, or just one part of the matrix of accommodations that an employer should consider.
For more information, contact Jon at (440) 695-8044 or JHyman@Wickenslaw.com.
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Friday, March 9, 2012
WIRTW #216 (the “one that got away” edition)
One piece of news you may have missed this week involved a lawsuit filed seeking to block the NLRB’s impending workplace rights poster. The District Court for the District of Columbia upheld the NLRB’s right to require the poster, but invalidated certain portions related to penalties for non-compliance. All hope is not lost, as a similar lawsuit awaits ruling in a different federal court. And, the courts of appeals will have to have their say. For now, however, the poster is still on track for its April 30, 2012, debut in your workplace.
For more on this issue, I recommend the following, who have already covered it in much greater detail than me:
- NLRB Posting and Goose/Gander Rule for Employer and Employee NLRA Rights — from Russell Cawyer’s Texas Employment Law Update
- Court Strikes Down Portions Of NLRB Notice Posting Rules — from Labor Relations Update
- Federal Court Upholds the NLRB’s Notice-Posting Rule, But Limits The Rule’s Enforcement Provisions — from Minnesota Employer
- District Court Partially Upholds/Blocks NLRB Notice-Posting Rule — from Labor Relations Today
- Posting Rule Upheld (Sort Of) — from Manpower Employment Blawg
- Update: Challenges to NLRB Posting Rule — from Employer Law Report
- Two out of Three is Bad: Judge Says Poster Goes Up — from Michigan Employment Law
Here’s the rest of what I read this week:
Discrimination
- Can one anti-Semitic email make a tenable employee bias claim? — from Eric Meyer’s The Employer Handbook Blog
- Employment Discrimination Protocols for Discovery: They’re Coming — from Dan Schwartz’s Connecticut Employment Law Blog
- White guys need love too: Punitive damages and reverse discrimination — from Robin Shea’s Employment and Labor Insider
- Unemployed Status—The New Protected Class — from Labor Employment Law Blog
- Regarded-as disability and the ADA amendments — from Work Matters
- Direct threat with regards to employment discrimination — from Employment Law Bits
- Boys, Girls and Workplace Discrimination — from i-Sight Investigation Software Blog
- Why is Pregnancy Discrimination Still Happening? — from Fistful of Talent
- $168 Million Verdict In Single Plaintiff Termination Case — from California Employment Law
Social Media & Workplace Technology
- What Employers Are Thinking When They Look At Your Facebook Page — from Kashmir Hill’s The Not-So Private Parts
- Using Social Media to Screen Job Applicants – Yes or No? — from Unbridled Talent
- Should Cyber-Screening by Employers Be Legislated? — from Molly DiBianca’s Delaware Employment Law Blog
- The Problem’s Not Just Porn Anymore — from The Employer's Lawyer
- Off-Duty Blogging Creates Employer Harassment Liability — from Phil Miles’s Lawffice Space
- As Social Media Adoption Grows So Does Corporate Risk — from Jessica Miller-Merrell’s Blogging4Jobs
- The Anatomy of a Good Social Media Policy — from Social Media Today
- Steakhouse Waiter Fired For Showing The World What A Great Tipper Peyton Manning Is — from Deadspin
- Why You Should Check With Legal Before Searching Employee’s Emails — from LE Blog
HR & Employee Relations
- Bullies, Reputational Hijackings and Corporate Responsibility… — from The HR Capitalist, Kris Dunn
- How to Destroy Employee Morale in Four Easy Steps — from ABA Journal Daily News
Wage & Hour
- Ten Things Small Business Needs To Know About Minimum Wage and Overtime — from Wage & Hour Insights
- Have I Been Properly Labeled as an Exempt Manager for Overtime Purposes Under the FLSA? — from Randy Enochs’s Wisconsin Employment & Labor Law Blog
- Donning + Doffing = Divided Decisions — from Smart HR Manager
- Does an Employer Violate the FMLA When an Employee Answers Email or Telephone Calls While on Leave? — from Jeff Nowak’s FMLA Insights
- New mandates for paid sick leave raise hackles — from MSNBC.com
Labor Relations
- Herding home care workers into unions — from Walter Olson’s Overlawyered
- Workers, and NLRB, Under Attack — from The Nation
For more information, contact Jon at (440) 695-8044 or JHyman@Wickenslaw.com.
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Thursday, March 8, 2012
The value in delivering good news
Yesterday started out pretty lousy. My kids were all bent of shape because the cable box wasn’t working and they couldn’t watch their morning cartoons with their breakfast. (Thinking back to when I was 3 and 5, I would have been out of whack too.) So I spent more than an hour on the phone with AT&T’s customer service, which is not how I intended to spend my morning. Needless to say, I was in a pretty sour mood when I got to the office.
That sour mood lasted until the mail came at 11:30. Yesterday’s mail included an opinion and order granting summary judgment in my client’s favor in a discrimination and retaliation case. Sadly, the opportunities to deliver really good news to a client are seldom. Hearing the elation in my client’s voice when I told him that he had been vindicated in his decision to terminate an employee is what makes this job worthwhile.
I am not telling this story to toot my own horn. I’m always proud of the work I do for clients, and whether a court grants or denies a summary judgment motion is out of my control. Instead, I tell this story to focus on the part we can control—the ability to deliver really good news.
Think about the last time you pulled an employee aside to offer praise. I bet it’s been a little while. It’s not your fault. We’re all busy, and just don’t think about communications with employees unless it’s performance-related. We get bogged down in the bad and ignore the good.
Today, I want you to take a minute to offer a deserving employee some good news. Whether it’s a pat on the back for a job well done, or some praise for going the extra mile on a project, or something else entirely, take a minute to brighten someone’s day. Then, report back on the value you found in the experience.
For more information, contact Jon at (440) 695-8044 or JHyman@Wickenslaw.com.
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Wednesday, March 7, 2012
The importance of selecting the right counsel
No matter how good of an employer you are, no matter how well you treat your employees, and no matter how closely you try to follow the myriad laws that regulate your relationships with your employees, the harsh reality is that the fact that you are an employer means that you will get sued. Once you are sued, the first and most important decision you have to make is the choice of the lawyer who will defend you.
For example, consider Falzone v. Licastro (N.D. Ohio 3/4/12) [pdf], which dismissed an employee’s claims against his former employer. The lawyering involved in the briefing directly impacted the viability of the lawsuit:
At the outset, the Court observes that Falzone has greatly complicated the Court’s task. His ten-page-long opposition to summary judgment does not contain a single heading, is littered with unsupported conclusory allegations, eschews legal analysis for paragraph-long block quotes, and, with a couple of exceptions, either fails to identify the portions of the record on which his claims depend or cites parts of the record so voluminous that the Court can only wonder what it should be looking for.... For this reason alone, a grant of summary judgment to Defendants on Falzone’s claims is appropriate. Nevertheless, because the Court can, on its own, piece together enough of this poorly developed record to address in substance most of Falzone’s claims, it will.As Falzone illustrates, your choice of counsel can make or break your case. Choose wisely.
For more information, contact Jon at (440) 695-8044 or JHyman@Wickenslaw.com.
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Tuesday, March 6, 2012
The worst idea ever? “Unionism” as a protected class
Last year I wrote a post entitled The Employer’s Bill of Rights. It remains one of the most read and most commented-upon posts in the five-year history of this blog. In that post, I argued that employers need certain protections from the litany of workplace rights enjoyed by employees. Many of those employee rights fall under the umbrella of “protected classes” — race, sex, pregnancy, national origin, religion, age, disability, genetic information, and (in Ohio, at least) military status.
Last Wednesday, I came across an op-ed in The New York Times entitled, A Civil Right to Unionize. In this article, Richard Kahlenberg and Moshe Marvit opine that Title VII needs to be updated to include “the right to unionize” as a protected civil right:
In fact, the greatest impediment to unions is weak and anachronistic labor laws. It’s time to add the right to organize a labor union, without employer discrimination, to Title VII of the Civil Rights Act….
Our proposal would make disciplining or firing an employee “on the basis of seeking union membership” illegal just as it now is on the basis of race, color, sex, religion and national origin.
Have I missed something? Isn’t it already illegal to discriminate against employees because of their union support? Indeed, it’s right there, in black and white, in the National Labor Relations Act:
8(a)(3): It shall be an unfair labor practice for an employer … by discrimination in regard to hire or tenure of employment or any term or condition of employment to encourage or discourage membership in any labor organization.
With apologies to union supporters, there is no reality in which “unionism” exists on the same level as race, sex, disability, or the other protected classes. The “greatest impediment” to unions isn’t “weak and anachronistic labor laws.” It’s intelligent and strong-willed employees who understand that whatever benefit they might receive from a labor union is not worth the dues that come out of their paychecks.
And, the reality is that despite all of this pro-union rhetoric, labor unions are doing just fine without any additional help. Unions wins more than two-thirds of representation elections. All this proposal does is increase the burden for employers, without providing any appreciable benefit to employees — which is why I feel comfortable asking if this proposal is the worst idea ever.
For more information, contact Jon at (440) 695-8044 or JHyman@Wickenslaw.com.
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Monday, March 5, 2012
Despite what some think, employers do not set out to discriminate
At her cleverly-named employee-side blog, Donna Ballman reported on a study published by the National Employment Lawyers Association—an association of plaintiff-side employment lawyers—which concluded that plaintiffs only win 15% of employment cases in federal courts. When Donna compared that number to the 51% win-rate in non-employment cases, she concluded that federal judges are hostile to plaintiffs in employment cases.
Donna’s post led to the following Twitter conversation between Donna, management-side attorney Jeff Nowak, and me:
I do not believe that federal court judges (or any set of judges, for that matter) possess a predisposed hostility towards plaintiffs in employment cases. To the contrary, the low win-rate of plaintiffs in these cases is more explained by the fact that most employers simply do not discriminate.
When I think back over my 15-year career representing employers, I can think only of a few (2 or 3) that set out to discriminate against an employee. (To be fair, many more committed sins of ignorance, acting not out of malice, but out of inexperience with the complexities of the myriad employment laws they are charged with understanding and following.) The reality is that lawsuits can result from well-intentioned employers making well-intentioned personnel decisions.
We live in a society where people are quick to blame others for their mistakes. People choose to litigate instead of accepting their own responsibility for a job loss. These ideas more likely explain the 15% win-rate for plaintiffs than any judicial predispositions for employers.
For more information, contact Jon at (440) 695-8044 or JHyman@Wickenslaw.com.
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Friday, March 2, 2012
WIRTW #215 (the “Sam I Am” edition)
Today, Dr. Seuss would have been 108 years old. What does Dr. Seuss have to do with employment law, you ask? Believe it or not, I have an answer for you — More lessons from children’s lit: Dr. Seuss — which I wrote more than two years ago. Enjoy this oldie from the archives in honor of Dr. Seuss’s 108th birthday.
Here’s the rest of what I read this week:
Discrimination
- Disabled-hiring “goals” for federal contractors — from Walter Olson’s Overlawyered
- Leave of Absence as Reasonable Accommodation for Disability? It Depends — from Employment Matters Blog
- Want Some Insight into the EEOC’s priorities in the Area of ADA and Leaves of Absence? Follow EEOC Commissioner Chai Feldblum on Twitter — from Jeff Nowak’s FMLA Insights
- On the EEOC radar: Pregnancy and caregiver discrimination — from John Holmquist’s Michigan Employment Law Connection
- When illegal interview questions are legal — from Evil HR Lady, Suzanne Lucas
- Linguistic Challenges in the Workplace — from Southwest Florida HR Law & Solutions
- Genetic Information Non-Discrimination Act (“GINA”) — from Texas Employer Handbook
- Three Steps That Will Help Prevent Sexual Harassment Problems — from Mike Haberman’s Omega HR Solutions
- EEOC’s Strategic Plan and 5 tips for employers seeking a good mediation — from Robin Shea’s Employment and Labor Insider
- Why appearance-based discrimination isn’t illegal — from i-Sight Investigation Software Blog
Social Media & Workplace Technology
- “Twitter Is Not Your Personal Playground,” ESPN Reminds Its Employees — from Deadspin
- Employer Is Liable for Off-Duty Harassment-by-Blog — from Molly DiBianca’s Delaware Employment Law Blog
- Social Media and the Workplace — from Security Management
- Top 5 Signs Lawyers Should Know About Pinterest — from Phil Miles’s Lawffice Space
- Pin with Caution, Says Lawyer Who Deleted All Her Pinterest Posts — from ABA Journal Daily News
- You can’t get Facebook login info based on a smiling profile pic — from Eric Meyer’s The Employer Handbook Blog
- Achieving Work Life Balance with Mobile Technology — from Jessica Miller-Merrell’s Blogging4Jobs
- iPad at Work: for the President at His Daily Briefing in the White House — from iPad Insight
HR & Employee Relations
- Could Pixar’s “Secret Story Guidelines” Work for Your Team? — from Harvard Business Review
- Tragedy in Chardon: a lesson for HR — from Warren & Associates Blog
- New York Court Finds Clinic Not Liable for Employee’s Disclosure of PHI — from Privacy Law Blog
- “Tail Coverage” Following Termination of Employment: What Physicians (and their Employers) Should Know? — from Health Employment and Labor
- Employee handbooks – just when you thought it was safe… — from HR idiot
- Does Paternity Leave Hurt Women? — from The Juggle
- Debate Over Sick Leave Intensifies — from Sarah Needleman in the Wall Street Journal
For more information, contact Jon at (440) 695-8044 or JHyman@Wickenslaw.com.
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Thursday, March 1, 2012
Do you know? The ADA and reverse discrimination
Earlier this week, the EEOC published Veterans and the Americans with Disabilities Act (ADA): A Guide for Employers. In this guide, the EEOC asks the following question:
May a private employer give preference in hiring to a veteran with a disability over other applicants?
According to the agency, the answer is “yes.” The ADA does not prohibit “affirmative action on behalf of individuals with disabilities. Nothing prohibits an employer from hiring an individual with a disability who is qualified over a (presumably less) qualified applicant without a disability.
If you think about, this statement makes a lot of sense. Title VII prohibits reverse discrimination because it makes no differentiation on the basis of majority or minority status. It merely prohibits discrimination on the basis of race/sex/religion/national origin. The ADA, on the other hand, only protects the disabled. For one to be covered by the ADA, one must meet the specific statutory definition of “disability.”
If this difference was not already clear enough, the ADAAA added a section to the statute expressly stating that the ADA does not protect those who claim discrimination because of a “lack of disability.”
The EEOC’s guide is worth a quick read. It offers some excellent pointers on how to handle the recruiting, hiring, and accommodating of anyone with a disability — whether veterans or civilians.
For more information, contact Jon at (440) 695-8044 or JHyman@Wickenslaw.com.
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Wednesday, February 29, 2012
Today is “exempt employees work free” day
Even though the modern calendar contains 365 days, it actually takes 365 days and 6 hours for the earth to complete one rotation of the sun. To account for these extra 6 hours, every 4 years contains 366 days, not 365 (to be precise, it’s years divisible by 4 or 400, but not 100). This extra day is known as Leap Day (which happens to be today).
I had an entire post written for today about the wage and hour implications of this quadrennial tradition. I was going to tell you all about how exempt employees don’t really get paid for leap days, because their annual salary is based on a 365-day cycle. Then Dan Schwartz beat me the to punch. I know I’ve scooped Dan before, so I figure turnabout is only fair. Plus, when the Yankees are watching the Phils (hopefully on their televisions) hoisting the World Series trophy in October, I’ll have the one that matters anyway. Right Dan?
For more information, contact Jon at (440) 695-8044 or JHyman@Wickenslaw.com.
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Tuesday, February 28, 2012
In the wake of a tragedy, more on humanity and human resources
Yesterday was a tragic day in Northeast Ohio. I extend my thoughts and prayers to anyone affected by the horrors at Chardon High School.
Today, Chardon’s schools are closed. Kids will be home from school. Some, because their parents will be working, will be left to deal with their grief in solitude, trying to understand and come to terms with what they witnessed. Neither the FMLA, nor any other leave law in Ohio, covers these circumstances.
Last week, I wrote about the need to put the “human” back in human resources. For any company that has employees with children who attend Chardon schools, today is great day to start down this path of humanity. Forget what the law does or does not require of your employees, and allow them the day to spend with their grieving, angry, and confused children. What you might lose in productivity your employees will repay you in gratitude and good will.
For more information, contact Jon at (440) 695-8044 or JHyman@Wickenslaw.com.
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Monday, February 27, 2012
6th Circuit: Employee must know about harassment to complain about it
Berryman v. SuperValu Holdings, Inc. (6th Cir. 2/24/12) [pdf] concerns the racial harassment allegations of 11 different employees, spanning 25 years. The allegations included vulgar graffiti, overtly racist comments by coworkers, and racially motivated pranks. Taken together, the allegations painted the picture of a workplace rife with severe, pervasive racially hostile behavior. The problem for these 11 plaintiffs, however, was that none were personally aware of the alleged hostile environments alleged by the other 10. Thus, the Court concluded that it was improper to aggregate their allegations into one over-arching hostile work environment:
In short, a plaintiff does not need to be the target of, or a witness to harassment in order for us to consider that harassment in the totality of the circumstances; but he does need to know about it.
This case does not alter your legal responsibilities to respond and react to a hostile work environment. If you learn that you have employees …
- Hanging an “effigy of an African American supervisor.”
- Writing “nigger” on the floor.
- Displaying drawing of people with “large lips and nappy hair.”
- Posting “pictures of monkeys” alongside “a picture of police cars chasing O.J. Simpson.”
… you have to do something about it. You have to investigate and you have to take real and effective corrective action to stop it from continuing or happening in the future.
This case, however, illustrates an important and often misunderstood point. The law only protects employees who are exposed to a hostile work environment. It only provides a remedy to employees who know of (first-hand or second-hand) the offensive conduct. It does not provide a remedy to every employee who enjoys the coincidence of being employed in a workplace that happens to be hostile to others.
For more information, contact Jon at (440) 695-8044 or JHyman@Wickenslaw.com.
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Friday, February 24, 2012
WIRTW #214 (the “errata” edition)
A few weeks ago I gave a presentation about legal blogging to the Ohio Women’s Bar Association Leadership Institute. During my talk the question arose of whether I’ve ever made a mistake, and, if so, how I handled it. I spoke of one incident when something I had written was incorrect. I also spoke of the importance of transparency with my readers, and my willingness to fall on my sword and admit that I was wrong (my wife will tell you this isn’t always easy for me).
Today is post number 1,365 (yikes). When you write as much as I do, something is bound to fall through the cracks every now and again. An astute reader pointed out an omission from Monday’s post on holiday pay. I wrote that because paid holidays are discretionary, there is no legal requirement that you have pay non-exempt employees for holidays off. That statement is true, but not if you pay the non-exempt employee a fixed salary pursuant to a fluctuating workweek calculation. In that instance, you must pay the employee for any holidays off, or risk the fluctuating workweek status and the overtime calculation benefits that come with it. For more on the fluctuating workweek, I recommend Robert Fitzpatrick’s excellent white paper [pdf] on the topic.
The way I figure it, I’m batting .999, MVP-like numbers no matter how you slice it.
Here’s the rest of what I read this week:
Discrimination
- Has the Expanded Definition of Disability under the ADAAA Gone Too Far? — from Russell Cawyer’s Texas Employment Law Update
- With DSM-5 on the Way, Is It Time to Update Definition of “Mental Disability”? — from Dan Schwartz’s Connecticut Employment Law Blog
- Supervisor’s advice to sexually-harassed employee: “Pray…” — from Eric Meyer’s The Employer Handbook Blog
- Asking for a doctor’s note explaining a health-related absence can violate the ADA — from Warren & Associates Blog
- Employee’s inability to work overtime is not a per se disability under the ADA — from Employment Law Matters
- 12 Tips to Lower Legal Bills, Assist Lawyer in Employment Disputes — from HR Hero Line
- Lent, Catholicism, Religious Accommodations — from LaborRelated
- Title VII and Contraceptive Coverage — from The Proactive Employer Blog
- Why Genetic Discrimination Is Illegal — from Time
Social Media & Workplace Technology
- Social Media Policies: The Latest — from Manpower Employment Blawg
- Tech Co Daxko’s Social Media Policy Like TV’s Tattoo — from Fistful of Talent
- Why corporate Facebook policies are stupid — from Jay Shepherd’s Gruntled Employees
- Social Media And The Fight To Be First — from Social Media Employment Law Blog
HR & Employee Relations
- Employee Handbooks Revisited: Damned If You Do, Damned If You Don’t — from Mike Haberman’s Omega HR Solutions
- Promoting a Culture of Security: Is It the Most Important Step in Protecting Trade Secrets? — from Trade Secret Litigator Blog
- When is it okay to quit without giving notice? — from The Evil HR Lady, Suzanne Lucas
Wage & Hour
- Exploring an Employer’s Obligations to Pay Accrued Vacation and Severance under Michigan Law — from Jason Shinn’s Michigan Employment Law Advisor
- When is the Minimum Wage Not the Minimum Wage? — from Stephanie Thomas at Compensation Cafe
- Another Call Center Case Focuses On Off The Clock Working Time — from Wage & Hour - Development & Highlights
- IRS to Employers: Raise Your Hand If You’ve Misclassified Workers — from Delaware Employment Law Blog
- Summary of 2011 FMLA Cases: Valuable Resource to Employers — from Jeff Nowak’s FMLA Insights
- Stephen Colbert Provides Reminder That Family Medical Leave Is Not A Laughing Matter — from California Employment Law Report
- DOL’s “Updated” FMLA Forms List New 2015 Expiration Date — from New York Labor and Employment Law Report
Labor Relations
- By George! Here’s an angle on NLRB/social media that I bet you haven’t thought of — from Robin Shea’s Employment and Labor Insider
- Research Reveals How Labor Unions Use Social Media — from Jessica Miller-Merrell’s Blogging4Jobs
- Your Position at the Bargaining Table May Open the Door to a Broad Request for Information From the Union — from Trade Secret / Noncompete Blog
For more information, contact Jon at (440) 695-8044 or JHyman@Wickenslaw.com.
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Thursday, February 23, 2012
NLRB refuses to expand representation rights to non-union employees during investigatory interviews
The NLRB’s Acting General Counsel continues to try to chip away at the rights of non-unionized employers. His latest involves an attempt to expand Weingarten rights to non-unionized employees. What are Weingarten rights, you ask? They are the rights of employees to have union representation during an employer’s investigatory interview. In 2000, the Clinton-era NLRB expanded these rights to employees at non-unionized workplaces. Unsurprisingly, non-union employers lost their collective minds. Less than four years later, however, George Bush’s NLRB restored sanity by reversing that ruling and again limiting Weingarten rights to union shops only. It was only a matter of time before someone tried to swing the Weingarten pendulum again. This time, however, the NLRB didn’t take the bait.
In Praxair Distribution, Inc. (2/21/12) [pdf], the NLRB’s Acting General Counsel argued that the employer denied a non-union employee his Weingarten rights when it refused to allow him to make a phone call in connection with an investigatory interview. The NLRB clearly and unequivocally refused to expand the protections of Weingarten to non-union employees:
Under existing case law, Weingarten rights do not apply to unrepresented workers such as the employees of the Praxair operation involved here.
Now, if we can only get the Board to rein in its Acting General Counsel on the scope of appropriate workplace social media policies, we’ll really have something to celebrate.
For more information, contact Jon at (440) 695-8044 or JHyman@Wickenslaw.com.
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Wednesday, February 22, 2012
Sitting on the dock … of the paycheck (or how to lose an employee’s exemption in 1 easy step)
The hallmark of the key exemptions under the Fair Labor Standards Act (administrative, executive, and professional) is that the exempt employee must be paid a salary of at least $455 per week. An employee is paid on a salary basis when the employee receives the same amount of pay each pay period, without any deductions. For this reason, if you take deductions from an exempt employee’s weekly pay, you place their exemption at risk. This error could prove costly. The lost exemption does not only apply to the employee against whom the deduction was taken, but also to all employees in the same job classification working for the same managers responsible for the deduction.
Yesterday, in Orton v. Johnny’s Lunch Franchise, LLC [pdf], the 6th Circuit illustrated the implications of these rules. Johnny’s Lunch employed Orton as a vice president, at an annual base salary of $125,000. The employer suffered from financial difficulties and was unable to make its payroll. Thus, from August 2008 until Johnny’s Lunch laid off the entire executive staff on December 1, 2008, Orton worked without receiving any pay. The 6th Circuit concluded that the employer’s failure to pay Orton his full salary for those four months eradicated the exemption, which, in turn, put the employer on the hook not only for Orton’s unpaid salary, but also any overtime he worked during those months.
The Court started by defining the scope of an “improper deduction” from an employees salary: “An employer who makes improper deductions from salary shall lose the exemption if the facts demonstrate that the employer did not intend to pay employees on a salary basis.” 29 C.F.R. § 541.603(a). The Court concluded that Orton’s employment agreement (which established his annual salary) was irrelevant to the issue of whether he lost his exemption: “The question is therefore not what Orton was owed under his employment agreement; rather, the question is what compensation Orton actually received.” Because Orton did not receive his full salary for the weeks in question, he lost his exemption.
All of this begs the question — what is an employer to do if it cannot afford to pay an otherwise exempt employee his or her full salary, and needs to make deductions to keep the doors open? The 6th Circuit answered this question, too:
That is not to say a company with cash flow issues is left with no recourse. Nothing in the FLSA prevents such an employer from renegotiating in good faith a new, lower salary with one of its otherwise salaried employees. The salary-basis test does not require that the predetermined amount stay constant during the course of the employment relationship. Of course, if the predetermined salary goes below [$455 per week], the employer may be unable to satisfy the salary-level test, which explicitly addresses the amount an employee must be compensated to remain exempt.
I firmly believe that employers should not pigeonhole legal issues and business issues. Sometimes (like with social media and the NLRB) business issues impact and guide legal decisions. In this case, the legal issues must guide the business decision. The the legal issues surrounding the proper payment of an employee’s salary under applicable wage and hour laws and regulations directly impact the business issues of remaining solvent. An employer cannot navigate that business decision without understanding and accounting for the legal implications of failing to pay exempt employees their salaries.
For more information, contact Jon at (440) 695-8044 or JHyman@Wickenslaw.com.
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Tuesday, February 21, 2012
Putting the “human” back in human resources (or, how the FMLA covers life-support decisions)
On April 4, 2006, Jerry Romans Plaintiff received a call at work from his sister, who told him that his terminally ill mother was unlikely to survive the night, and decisions needed to be made about whether to keep her on life support. Prior, Romans had submitted paperwork to his employer certifying that he was a health care provider and power of attorney for his mother. He intended to go to the hospital immediately after his shift, which was scheduled to end at 11 p.m. His employer, however, told him to work a double shift to cover for an employee on the next shift who had called off. Romans told his supervisor, “I’m not staying. My mom’s dying. I’m leaving,” but the supervisor responded, “I’ll have you fired if you leave.” Romans nevertheless punched out, left the facility, and drove to the hospital.
In his subsequent lawsuit, Romans challenged that the one-day suspension he received for “leaving the facility and abandoning his shift” violated the FMLA. In Romans v. Michigan Dep’t of Human Servs. (2/16/12) [pdf], the 6th Circuit agreed. The court pointed out that the FMLA’s regulations provide that an employee who is “needed to care for” a family member is entitled to FMLA leave. That “care” can be either psychological comfort or physical care, and includes arrangements for changes in care. The 6th Circuit concluded that “a decision regarding whether an ill mother should stay on life support would logically be encompassed by ‘arrangements for changes in care.’” Applying a common sense (and, dare I say, human) interpretation of the FMLA, the court added, “To be sure, this is the kind of decision, like transfer to a nursing home, that few people would relish making without the help of other family members, and the regulations do not force them to do so.”
To often, we, as lawyers, business owners, HR professionals, and the like, become too caught up in what the law allows us to do or forbids us from doing. When you focus too much on the legalities of a personnel decision, you risk losing focus on the humanities of the situation. This case illustrates 1) that the law, every now and again, lets employers make humane personnel decisions, and 2) bad things happen when businesses ignore the golden rule of employment relations.
For more information, contact Jon at (440) 695-8044 or JHyman@Wickenslaw.com.
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Monday, February 20, 2012
8 things you need to know about holiday pay
Today is Presidents’ Day. According to a recent poll of employers conducted by SHRM, 34% of employers will be closed today. Whether you are closed on any holiday, here are 8 things you should know about holiday pay for your employees. All of these guidelines assume that your company lacks a collective bargaining agreement.
1. Do you have to pay for holidays? You are not required to pay non-exempt employees for holidays. Paid holidays is a discretionary benefit left entirely up to you. Exempt employees present a different challenge. The Fair Labor Standards Act does not permit employers to dock the salary of an exempt employee for holidays. You can make a holiday unpaid for exempt employees, but it will jeopardize their exempt status, at least for that week.
2. What happens if holiday falls on an employee’s regularly scheduled day off, or when the business is closed? While not required, many employers give an employee the option of taking off another day if a holiday falls on an employee’s regular day off. This often happens when employees work compressed schedules (four 10-hour days as compared to five 8-hour days). Similarly, many employers observe a holiday on the preceding Friday or the following Monday when a holiday falls on a Saturday or Sunday when the employer is not ordinarily open.
3. If we choose to pay non-exempt employees for holidays, can we require that they serve some introductory period to qualify? It is entirely up to your company’s policy whether non-exempt employees qualify for holiday pay immediately upon hire, or after serving some introductory period. Similarly, an employer can choose only to provide holiday pay to full-time employees, but not part-time or temporary employees.
4. Can we require employees to work on holidays? Because holiday closings are a discretionary benefit, you can require that employees work on a holiday. In fact, the operational needs of some businesses will require that some employees work on holidays (hospitals, for example).
5. Can we place conditions on the receipt of holiday pay? Yes. For example, some employers are concerned that employees will combine a paid holiday with other paid time off to create extended vacations. To guard again this situation, some companies require employees to work the day before and after a paid holiday to be eligible to receive holiday pay.
6. How do paid holidays interact with the overtime rules for non-exempt employees? If an employer provides paid holidays, it does not have to count the paid hours as hours worked for purposes of determining whether an employee is entitled to overtime compensation. Also, an employer does not have to pay any overtime or other premium rates for holidays (although some choose to do so).
7. Do you have to provide holiday pay for employees on FMLA leave? You have to treat FMLA leaves of absence the same as other non-FMLA leaves. Thus, you only have to pay an employee for holidays during an unpaid FMLA leave if you have a policy of providing holiday pay for employees on other types of unpaid leaves. Similarly, if an employee reduces his or her work schedule for intermittent FMLA leave, you may proportionately reduce any holiday pay (as long as you treat other non-FMLA leaves the same).
8. If an employee takes a day off as a religious accommodation, does it have to be paid? An employer must reasonably accommodate an employee whose sincerely held religious belief, practice, or observance conflicts with a work requirement, unless doing so would pose an undue hardship. One example of a reasonable accommodation is unpaid time off for a religious holiday or observance. Another is allowing an employee to use a vacation day for the observance.
Here comes the disclaimer. The laws of your state might be different. If you are considering adopting or changing a holiday pay policy in your organization, or have questions about how your employees are being paid for holidays and other days off, it is wise to consult with counsel.
For more information, contact Jon at (440) 695-8044 or JHyman@Wickenslaw.com.
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Friday, February 17, 2012
WIRTW #213 (the “Hello Cleveland!” edition)
Above the Law (c/o the Chicago Sun-Times) reports that Justice Scalia offered the following words of wisdom while speaking to a group of students at the University of Chicago School of Law:
Try to find a practice that enables you to maintain a human existence … time for your family, your church or synagogue, community … boy scouts, little league…. You should look for a place like that. I’m sure they’re still out there. Maybe you have to go to Cleveland.
Readers, introducing the next spokesperson for Positively Cleveland, United States Supreme Court Justice Antonin Scalia.
Here’s the rest of what I read this week:
Discrimination
- Age Discrimination Suits Jump, But Wins Are Elusive — from NPR’s Morning Edition
- Employee is Not “Substantially Limited” Under the ADA When He is Able to Work a 40-Hour Week But No Overtime — from Employment Matters Blog
- All You Need Is … A Sexual Harassment Complaint — from Dawn Lomer at i-Sight Investigation Software Blog
- A Valentine's Day bouquet of sexual harassment cases — from Robin Shea’s Employment and Labor Insider
- Lawsuit Alleges Sexual Harassment at Breastaurant. Again. — from Tim Eavenson’s Current Employment
- Plaintiff’s Repeated “I Don't Know” in Depositions Are Claim Killers — from Russell Cawyer’s Texas Employment Law Update
- Hoops, Race and Workplace Stereotypes: Why I’m Ordering a Jeremy Lin T-Shirt Today… — from The HR Capitalist, Kris Dunn
- New Approaches to Understand Why Women Earn Less — from Stephanie Thomas’s Proactive Employer Blog
Social Media & Workplace Technology
- Are Your Employees Committing Thought Crimes? — from Frank Roche’s KnowHR Blog
- Tracking Employees By GPS: Better Have a Good Policy — from Mike Haberman’s Omega HR Solutions
- I’m unPinterested — from Tim Sackett at Fistful of Talent
- Protecting Trade Secrets and Confidential Information In The Social Media Generation — from Trading Secrets
- Teacher “Hates” Students on Facebook, Lies, Jokes About Child's Death - Reinstated! — from Phil Miles’s Lawffice Space
- What The Internet Knows About You And How To Protect Yourself — from Forbes
HR & Employee Relations
- 26 Years on the Job and Not One Sick Day — from the Wall Street Journal
- Hi boss — I’m too bored … er, sick … to come in fr— from om Today Money
- Rogue Employee of the Week – The case of the lunchtime drunk — from damnedif
- Nepotism Is Not Illegal — from Donna Ballman’s Screw You Guys, I’m Going Home
- Suck it, Cupid. You don’t work here! — from Michael VanDervort’s The Human Race Horses
- No-Hire Tobacco Policies: Why They Are a Communication and Cultural Challenge — from TLNT
- The Four Questions to Ask Before Changing to PTO — from HR Daily Advisor
- Would you get a divorce in order to telecommute? — from Evil HR Lady, Suzanne Lucas
- Working from Home More Important than Showering & Spouses — from Jessica Miller-Merrell’s Blogging4Jobs
- 10 Things Bosses Never Tell Employees — from Inc.com
Wage & Hour
- Annals of wage and hour law — from Walter Olson’s Overlawyered
- DOL Proposes Significant Changes to the Home Health Care Industry — from BLEG Blog
- Federal Judge Enjoins Alleged Retaliatory Group Termination of Warehouse Workers — from Wage and Hour Law Update
- “Linsanity” for Employers to Fail to Post Required Notices — from Dan Schwartz’s Connecticut Employment Law Blog
- New FMLA Certification Forms Available from DOL — from Smart HR Manager
- The wrong way and the right way to request FMLA certification — from Eric Meyer’s The Employer Handbook Blog
Until next week:
For more information, contact Jon at (440) 695-8044 or JHyman@Wickenslaw.com.
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Thursday, February 16, 2012
Latest stats about supervisors being “Facebook friends” with employees reveals interesting generational data
ZDNet’s Friending Facebook blog reports on a survey [pdf] conducted by marketing agency Russell Herder, which concluded that 21% of employees are Facebook friends with the boss. I’ve written before about some of the risks, and some of the benefits, that germinate from taking workplace relationships online into the social sphere. Those issues haven’t changed.
There’s a lot of interesting data in the report. At 9 pages, it’s definitely worth your reading time. The data that I found to be the most interesting deals with the impact of an employee’s age on the opinion of online relationships between managers and employees:
Only 28% of employees ages 18-34 believe it is inappropriate to friend their supervisor on Facebook. The number rises to nearly 50% for those ages 45 and up.
These numbers confirm what I’ve long believed—that generational differences in attitudes about the role of technology in our daily lives exponentially complicates employers’ ability to regulate the use of social media in the workplace. To effectively implement a social media policy in your organization, you will have to account for (and solve) this generational divide.
For more information, contact Jon at (440) 695-8044 or JHyman@Wickenslaw.com.
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Wednesday, February 15, 2012
What is an employee’s word for the need for FMLA leave worth? Not much
How often does this scenario play out in your organization? An employee tells a supervisor that he’s sick and needs to take FMLA leave. The supervisor refers the issue to HR or management. Paralyzed out of fear that they will screw up an FMLA process that they really doesn’t understand, they approve the FMLA leave with no other questions asked.
Because of a fundamental misunderstanding of when employees qualify for FMLA leave, lots of employers over-compensate when dealing with employee medical issues and the FMLA. They over-compensate by mistakenly assuming that any employee with any illness or medical condition is FMLA-eligible. In reality, only an employee with a “serious medical condition” qualifies for FMLA-leave.
In reality, you do not have to take an employee at his or her word that he or she needs FMLA leave. Case in point? Huberty v.Time Warner Entertainment Co. (N.D. Ohio 2/8/12).
Huberty claimed that Time Warner interfered with his rights under the FMLA when it fired him after he asked his supervisor for time off to deal with “stress in his life.” Before Huberty found a doctor to certify his medical condition, he began taking time off. Time Warner terminated Huberty for violating its no-call/no-show policy for three consecutive days.
The court dismissed Huberty’s FMLA claim, concluding that neither his own subjective assessment of his health did not satisfy his burden to establish a “serious health condition.”
There is an abundance of case law that makes it clear that Huberty’s own subjective assessment of his health cannot be used to demonstrate a serious health condition. A colleague on this Court has noted as follows with respect to this burden:
It does not mean that, in the employee’s own judgment, he or she should not work, or even that it was uncomfortable or inconvenient for the employee to have to work. Rather, it means that a “health care provider” has determined that, in his or her professional medical judgment, the employee cannot work (or could not have worked) because of the illness. If it were otherwise, a note from a spouse, parent, or even one’s own claim that one cannot work because of illness would suffice. Given the legislative history surrounding its enactment, the FMLA cannot be understood to establish such liberal standards for its application.
What does this mean for your management of your employees’ FMLA leave? Don’t just take your employees at their word that they need FMLA leave. You have an absolute right to request and receive a timely medical certification before certifying a leave of absence as FMLA-qualifying. Do not short-circuit your rights by rubber-stamping every employee medical request as “FMLA.”
For more information, contact Jon at (440) 695-8044 or JHyman@Wickenslaw.com.
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Tuesday, February 14, 2012
Nothing can go wrong when employees date each other, right?
In honor of Valentine’s Day, I bring you a story of love, romance … and sexual harassment (what else?).
Sanders v. DaimlerChrysler Corp. starts out like any great love story. Girl meets boy on the assembly line of the local automobile plant. They date for two years. Then, she tells him she doesn’t want to continue their relationship. How does boy respond? Like any alleged harasser, he says, “I can do something to your job.” And, she takes him at his word (he’s a union steward after all). When she has job-related issues returning from a medical leave, she sues the company for, among other things, sexual harassment. Ultimately, this story ended well for the employer; it won the case at trial. But, it cost the company seven years of litigation, more than a dozen depositions, countless motion practice, a costly trial, and a trip to the court of appeals.
I’m not here to tell you that you should forbid your employees from dating. Far from it. The heart is going to go where the heart wants to go. In other words, if your employees want to date, they will — with or without a policy forbidding their relationships and dalliances. Instead, look at workplace romances as an opportunity to educate your employees about the ins and outs of your harassment policy. Train your employees about what is and is not appropriate workplace conduct between the sexes. Focusing on conduct (and misconduct) instead of the relationships will provide your employees the necessary tools to avoid the types of problems that arose in Sanders, which, in turn, will help your organization avoid the litigation expenses those problems often cause.
Happy Valentine’s Day
For more information, contact Jon at (440) 695-8044 or JHyman@Wickenslaw.com.
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