A well-maintained company bulletin board can be an effective method for management to communicate new policies and procedures to employees and boost employee morale. Additionally, bulletin board postings may serve as valuable evidence in the event of a lawsuit or grievance. A neglected bulletin board, however, is a trap for the unwary and a tool [...]
Posted in Discrimination and Harassment, Employee Morale, Handbooks, Handbooks and Policies, Harassment, Kentucky, Policies, Safety, Safety in the Workplace, Wage and Hour, Wage and Hour Law, Workplace Discrimination by: Kentucky Employment Law Letter
No Comments
Although employment decisions are often based on one specific incident or reason, such as poor work performance, many decisions stem from several causes. If an employee challenges a termination, a demotion, or another adverse action that was taken for two or more reasons, only one of which is illegal, will the employer be liable? The [...]
Posted in Absenteeism, Discipline, Discrimination and Harassment, FMLA, FMLA Leave, Kentucky, Retaliation, Title VII by: Kentucky Employment Law Letter
No Comments
A swine flu pandemic was a no-show this past spring, but there’s no guarantee it won’t come roaring back when the regular flu season gets under way this fall. Swine flu (also called the H1N1 virus) should be taken seriously because this particular strain hasn’t been seen before, so people haven’t built up natural immunity. [...]
Posted in ADA, EEOC, FMLA, Kentucky, NLRA, OSH Act, OSHA, Telecommuting by: Kentucky Employment Law Letter
No Comments
In past issues of HR Hero Line, we’ve examined the FMLA regs issued by the Department of Labor (DOL) in November 2008. This week, the attorney editors of the Kentucky Employment Law letter examine a few more changes made by the new FMLA regulations including holidays, joint employers, leave for pregnancy and childbirth, and employer [...]
Posted in ADA, FMLA, Kentucky by: Kentucky Employment Law Letter
No Comments
As more and more companies struggle in this tough economy, many are forced to implement reductions in force (RIFs) and layoffs. Often, RIF decisions lead to litigation if not properly planned. In a recent case, the Sixth U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals held that an employer didn’t discriminate against employees based [...]
Posted in Disparate Impact, Disparate Treatment, Kentucky, Layoffs, Sex Discrimination, Termination, Workplace Discrimination by: Kentucky Employment Law Letter
No Comments