HR Hero Your Employment Law Resource

HR Hot Topics

Home > HR Topics > Firings | All Topics > A B C D E F G H I J K L M N O P Q R S T U V W X Y Z
Bookmark and Share Send to a Colleague

Employment Laws Regarding Firing Employees


Additional HR Resources

First Line of Defense
DVD-based training for supervisors on the most critical legal issues

Guide to Firing
Report reveals specific steps
to take to minimize legal risks

Reduction in Force - RIF
Plain-English report explains
laws that apply to downsizing

Exit Interviews
Learn how to get the most out of an exit interview

Lawful Termination
Live workshops on employment law basics including terminations

Supervisor Training
Booklet on firing helps train
managers to avoid legal pitfalls

Alternatives to RIFs
Five alternatives to a reduction-in-force

Discover policy pitfalls
Audit your workplace policies
before a plaintiff’s attorney does

50 Laws in 50 States
Compare side by side and see
exactly what employers need to do

Guide to Termination
Master this critical HR function
to avoid issues in court





How an employer handles firing or laying off an employee on the front-end can make all the difference imaginable on how the separation of employment actually takes place. A well executed, carefully planned employee termination can avoid any serious stir in the workplace. A poorly executed, shoot-from-the-hip approach, on the other hand, can cost an employer dearly in terms of productivity and morale, as well as financially when the ex-employee fires back with a lawsuit.

Audit your termination policies and practices with the Employment Practices Self-Audit Workbook


Related articles on Employment Laws Regarding Firing Employees
Firing and Termination tools for Employment Law Letter subscribers
What's your HR IQ on Firings and Terminations?


Properly preparing for firing an employee starts with getting the paperwork in order – look at performance evaluations, disciplinary action forms, attendance sheets, etc., and make sure that the documentation shows that a case can be built that supports a proper reason to fire the employee. Documentation is important in helping make the decision in the first place but, more critically, it serves to back up the decision should the fired employee file a lawsuit.

Consistency in the documentation is key. Harmony between the employer’s reason for why the firing took place and the documentation on the employee’s work history can mean the difference between a simple parting of ways and a prolonged and messy legal battle, and employment attorneys know this. If an ex-employee’s lawyer, looking for evidence of a wrongful termination, sees a lack of consistency in the employee’s personnel files or a lack or records at all, employers should consider that blood on the water.

HR Guide to Employment Law: A practical compliance reference manual covering 14 topics, including firing

Protected classes of employees
Another very important consideration is whether an employee slated for possible termination is a member of a protected class. Federal law prohibits discrimination based on a number of factors such as race, color, religion, national origin, sex, pregnancy, age, disability, or citizenship.

State and local laws also can provide additional protection to employees. For example, no federal law currently protects against discrimination based on sexual orientation but a large number of states do.

State-by-state comparison of 50 employment laws in all 50 states, including sexual orientation discrimination, final paycheck, unemployment compensation, and noncompete agreements

Below is a list of the major employment laws which create protected status for certain employees:

Basic Training for Supervisors - easy-to-read training guides, including firing

Other considerations
Terminating an employee can lead to a number of other important issues. As every human resources professional knows, just because an employee no longer works for an employer it doesn’t mean that all ties have been severed completely.

Unemployment compensation is one such issue that can leave the specter of a former employee haunting an HR pro's office long after the employee was fired. Again, having good documentation that shows the employee was fired for misconduct can be critical in an unemployment compensation hearing. Winning in these hearings can save an employer big bucks in the long run.

COBRA and severance pay are two more issues that must be dealt with. By law, an employer must make an employee aware of his rights under COBRA for continuing to stay on the company’s health insurance program. Severance pay arrangements can offer some peace of mind for employers that the ex-employee won’t sue, but at a hefty price. Yet, putting a severance pay agreement in front of an employee who is being fired or laid off isn’t always a solid insurance policy against a lawsuit. If an exiting employee feels that he is leaving on bad terms, even the heftiest of severance sums may inspire him to use if he sees it as the company’s attempt to cover up indiscretions.

HR Hero Free White Papers: Downsizing: Getting It Right from Termination to Engaging the Survivors and 5 Alternatives to a RIF

View all HR topics

Bookmark and Share Send to a Colleague

Related articles on Employment Laws Regarding Firing an Employee featured in HR Hero Line, HR Hero White Papers, and the Employment Law Post

HR Tools for Firings and Terminations

     

Bookmark and Share Send to a Colleague

Subscriber Login
Social Networks:
Employers Forum
facebook
Twitter
YouTube
Copyright © M. Lee Smith Publishers LLC . All rights reserved. 800-274-6774


Infinite Menus, Copyright 2006, OpenCube Inc. All Rights Reserved.