Archive for the 'Handbooks' Category
by Mark Wiletsky
Organizations sometimes require employees to arbitrate claims or disputes that might arise during or after the employment relationship. Workers typically sign arbitration agreements when they’re hired but don’t always want to comply with them when there’s a dispute, and employees’ attorneys often want to present their case to a jury, not an arbitrator. [...]
Posted in Arbitration, Colorado, E-Discovery, Employment Contracts, Handbooks, Policies by: Colorado Employment Law Letter
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Employment law attorney Robert P. Tinnin, Jr., answers an HR practitioner’s question about improving a flextime program that has become unmanageable.
Posted in Alternative Work Schedule, Benefits, Employee Morale, Employee Retention, Exempt Employees, FMLA Leave, Handbooks, Handbooks and Policies, New Mexico, Overtime, Policies, Telecommuting, Wage and Hour Law, Work-Life Balance by: New Mexico Employment Law Letter
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According to the Equal Employment Opportunity Commission (EEOC), sexual harassment charges by men have doubled since 1992, accounting for 16 percent of the 12,696 sexual harassment charges filed in the 2009 fiscal year.
And while female-male sexual harassment certainly makes up some portion of those claims, it’s evident that male-male harassment claims are also on the [...]
Posted in EEOC, Handbooks, Harassment, Missouri, Retaliation, Sexual Harassment, Supervisor Training, Title VII, U.S. Supreme Court, Workplace Bullying by: Missouri Employment Law Letter
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Employers should regularly revise and modify their employment policies and employee handbooks as the law changes and as their operational needs dictate. Once you make policy changes, however, should you communicate them to your employees? If so, how? This article provides tips on how to best communicate policy changes to employees.
Audit your policies and practices [...]
Posted in Discipline, Handbooks, Ohio, Supervisor Training by: Ohio Employment Law Letter
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Employee handbooks present a double-edged sword. On the one hand, they serve a useful purpose in advising employees of key policies and procedures so they know what is expected of them. On the other hand, if they’re improperly drafted, they can be construed as binding contracts that, if not followed to the letter by the [...]
Posted in FLSA, Handbooks, Non-exempt Employee, Overtime, Wage and Hour, Wyoming by: Wyoming Employment Law Letter
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by Brian R. Garrison
Most employers know that federal and state civil rights laws prevent them from discriminating against employees on the basis of their religious beliefs and practices. But when you hear the phrase “reasonable accommodation,” you usually think of your duty under the Americans with Disabilities Act (ADA) to accommodate an employee with a disability. [...]
Posted in Discrimination and Harassment, Dress Code, Handbooks, Indiana, Religious Accommodation, Religious Discrimination, Safety in the Workplace, Title VII by: Indiana Employment Law Letter
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You have several employees you’ve caught red-handed violating a company rule that your employee manual says may justify termination for a first offense. When questioned, one admits to the wrongdoing; the others deny it. Can you fire the employees who lied but retain the other employee with a lesser disciplinary measure? According to a recent [...]
Posted in Break Time, Discrimination and Harassment, Handbooks, Illinois, National Origin Discrimination, Race Discrimination, Termination by: Illinois Employment Law Letter
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by Peter M. Panken
An employee handbook tells workers what they’re getting, instills a team spirit, and lets people know what the rules are. It should emphasize the employer’s fair treatment and how it provides significant benefits like vacations, holidays, health insurance, and retirement benefits. It lets the workers know they can grieve to get fair [...]
Posted in Absenteeism, Employee Leave, Employee Privacy, Handbooks, NLRA, NLRB, New York, Termination, Unions by: New York Employment Law Letter
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Q: Now that it’s getting warm (or should I say “hot”), some employees are wearing less and less to work every day. It doesn’t really bother me, but I believe some employees may be a little uncomfortable with the skimpy attire of their coworkers.
Posted in Discrimination and Harassment, Dress Code, Georgia, Handbooks by: Georgia Employment Law Letter
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It’s easy (and common) for retailers to hire temporary seasonal workers to help handle the rush of holiday business. But however temporary their employment might be, they’re still employees with all the potential for employer liability that status entails. It’s important to bear that in mind.
Audit your hiring policies and practices with the Employment Practices [...]
Posted in Alaska, Handbooks, Hiring, Temporary Employess by: Alaska Employment Law Letter
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