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Discrimination / Harassment

Following EEOC victory, carefully consider conditions you include in last-chance agreements

01/18/2012

In a significant legal victory, the EEOC has persuaded a federal court to limit what employers can in­­clude in so-called last-chance agreements. The court concluded that the EEOC was right when it argued that agreements threatening retaliation are illegal …

Aggressively stamp out workplace bawdiness

01/18/2012

Employers that don’t have a squeaky-clean, sex- and innuendo-free workplace may end up spending big bucks defending against sexual harassment charges. That means you need an aggressive program that bans all forms of sexual behavior and banter at work.

Hired him? You should be the one to fire him

01/18/2012

Make this a mantra in your organization: The same person who hired an employee should be the one to fire him if necessary. Here’s why:

Be prepared to answer the question: Are you biased, or is employee overly sensitive?

01/16/2012
Every once in a while, you’ll run across an employee who is hyper­­sensitive to any criticism. She may even attribute it to bias against a protected status, and may file an EEOC complaint. Rest assured that if you investigated and took her complaint seriously, the EEOC complaint will likely be dismissed.

OFCCP rocks Lund’s boat, charges gender discrimination

01/12/2012
The federal Office of Federal Con­­tract Compliance Programs is suing New York Mills-based Lund Boat Co. and parent company Bruns­­wick Corp., alleging discrimination against women in its hiring practices.

Paying women less, hoping for the best is recipe for Equal Pay Act disaster

01/12/2012
Ignoring an employee’s persistent complaints that she’s being paid less than her male counterparts may amount to a willful violation of the Equal Pay Act (EPA). And willful violations add a year onto the two years of back-pay liability.

Before firing, offer second chance to improve

01/12/2012

Some employees facing criticism will own up to the problem and work to improve. Others simply refuse to recognize that their per­­formance is subpar or contributing to discord in the workplace. Either way, it’s worth at least ex­­tend­­ing to the employee a chance to improve and keep his job—after you have docu­mented the nature of the problem.

New EEOC task force aims to help small businesses

01/12/2012
The EEOC has established a small business task force to improve its outreach to small businesses that may not have access to expert legal advice or a staff of experienced HR professionals. The goal: Ensure small-business owners know how to comply with federal anti-discrimination laws.

Strict attendance policy is fine if followed consistently

01/12/2012

Some jobs require employees to always show up on time. Nursing homes, day care centers, hospitals and the like are obvious examples. Draconian attendance policies may be necessary to ensure coverage. As long as they allow for FMLA leave and consider reasonable accommodations for disabled workers, such rules are fine.

Employees lose claim they were targeted for discomfort due to age

01/12/2012
Employers that make it difficult for employees to take breaks or keep a regular schedule may face resistance—and legal claims from disabled workers who need accommodations. But they don’t have to worry about lawsuits from older workers who claim the lack of breaks is age discrimination.