Archive for the 'Tennessee' Category
by Kara E. Shea
Independent contractors, by definition, are self-employed. Because they aren’t employees, they aren’t covered by employment, labor, and related tax laws. As a result, some employers may be tempted to reclassify employees as independent contractors to avoid taxes, benefits, record-keeping requirements, overtime, and other expenses.
Posted in Classifying Workers, DOL, FLSA, Independent Contractors, Tennessee, Wage and Hour Law by: Tennessee Employment Law Letter
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by Kara E. Shea
I’ve been working with several clients lately on Fair Labor Standards Act (FLSA) compliance issues — specifically, on exemption classification audits. During an audit, I review all the jobs an employer has deemed exempt from overtime under the FLSA and try to decide whether the positions have been correctly classified. It’s a [...]
Posted in Classifying Workers, Exempt Employees, FLSA, Non-exempt Employee, Overtime, Tennessee, Wage and Hour, Wage and Hour Law by: Tennessee Employment Law Letter
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by Kara E. Shea
I recently participated in hosting a Wage and Hour Virtual Summit webinar. Wage and hour compliance — overtime, work-time issues, exempt status — is always a lively topic and typically results in lots of questions and feedback. This time around, most of the feedback surrounded remarks I made about individual liability under [...]
Posted in Break Time, Child Labor, Classifying Workers, Comp Time, DOL, Exempt Employees, FLSA, FMLA, FMLA, Furloughs, Independent Contractors, Interns and Trainees, Minimum Wage, Non-exempt Employee, On-call Time, Overtime, Supervisor Training, Temporary Employess, Tennessee, Title VII, Travel Time, Wage and Hour, Wage and Hour Law by: Tennessee Employment Law Letter
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What is the biggest employment law challenge employers have been facing thus far in 2010? An easy answer might be health care reform since companies have indeed started wrestling with whether to grandfather their benefits plans or strike off in a new direction under new sets of rules and regulations.
But for many employment law attorneys [...]
Posted in ADA, ADA, ADA Amendments Act, DOL, Disability Discrimination, EEOC, EFCA, Federal Contractors, Massachusetts, NLRB, OFCCP, Oklahoma, Tennessee, WHD, Wage and Hour by: HR Hero Line
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A federal judge blocked parts of Arizona’s new immigration law on Wednesday, the day before the rest of the measure went into effect. But legal challenges are already flying and many are waiting to see what happens next.
Last year, a record number of immigration-related laws were considered and passed in the 50 states. Over 222 [...]
Posted in Arizona, California, Colorado, E-Verify, Georgia, Hawaii, Hiring, Illinois, Immigration, Iowa, Maine, Maryland, Minnesota, Mississippi, Montana, Nevada, New Jersey, Ohio, Oklahoma, South Carolina, State Laws, Tennessee, Texas, U.S. Supreme Court, Unemployment, Utah, Virginia, Washington, West Virginia, Workers Compensation by: Employers State Law Alert
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by Hillary J. Collyer
As a good employer, you certainly have the right to make sure your employees are physically capable of doing their jobs. Thus, you may require an employee to undergo a medical exam when you have legitimate objective concerns about her continued ability to do the job. That’s fine if the exam is [...]
Posted in ADA, Sex Discrimination, Tennessee, Termination, Virginia by: Virginia Employment Law Letter
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by Lorraine Yeomans
The 2010 state legislative sessions have kicked off across the nation, and one of the first pieces of legislation to be signed into law this year was a bill legalizing the use of medical marijuana.
On January 18, as one of his last acts before leaving office, New Jersey Governor Jon Corzine signed the [...]
Posted in ADA, ADA Accommodation, Alabama, Alaska, Arizona, California, Colorado, Delaware, Discipline, Drug Free Workplace, Drug Testing, Hawaii, Illinois, Iowa, Maine, Maryland, Massachusetts, Michigan, Mississippi, Missouri, Montana, Nevada, New Jersey, New Mexico, North Carolina, OSH Act, Oregon, Pennsylvania, Policies, Rhode Island, Safety in the Workplace, Tennessee, Vermont, Washington, Wisconsin by: Employers State Law Alert
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by Daniel B. Gilmore
If an employee is admittedly ineligible for leave under the Family and Medical Leave Act (FMLA) but his employer mistakenly informs him that he is eligible before he takes leave, should the employer be prevented from denying his request? The Sixth U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals recently addressed that question and held [...]
Posted in FMLA, FMLA Leave, Tennessee by: Tennessee Employment Law Letter
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by Kara Shea
One hopeful sign that our economy is perhaps inching back in the right direction is the number of calls I’ve received in recent weeks from clients inquiring about hiring back employees let go during a reduction in force (RIF). Some employers have told me they’re contemplating bringing back certain positions, or even entire [...]
Posted in Collective Bargaining Agreement, Hiring, Layoffs, Severance Agreements, Tennessee by: Tennessee Employment Law Letter
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The Uniformed Services Employment and Reemployment Rights Act of 1994 (USERRA) provides, at its core, reemployment rights for employees returning from military service and protection from employment discrimination following reemployment. Last month, the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Sixth Circuit clarified that a qualified service member’s reemployment rights can’t be [...]
Posted in Military Service, Tennessee, USERRA, Workplace Discrimination by: Tennessee Employment Law Letter
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