• The HR Specialist - Print Newsletter
  • HR Specialist: Employment Law
  • The HR Weekly
Connection failed: SQLSTATE[HY000] [2002] No such file or directory

Illinois

It’s final: Federal contractors must use E-Verify

10/02/2009

The federal government’s requirement that contractors confirm employee eligibility through Homeland Security’s E-Verify database has overcome its final legal hurdle. Several government contractors had sued to block implementation of the online verification requirement, but a federal court decision in Maryland cleared the way for it to take effect.

UPS picks up EEOC ADA lawsuit

10/01/2009

The EEOC has filed a disability discrimination lawsuit against UPS in federal court in Chicago. The suit alleges the package delivery giant consistently refuses to allow disabled workers to take extended medical leave as a reasonable accommodation. The EEOC filing seeks to make the suit a class action.

What kinds of employers does the Illinois Employee Classification Act cover?

10/01/2009

Q. What is the Illinois Employee Classification Act? I’m not sure if it applies to my company.

Don’t drop your guard just because Illinois court dismisses whistle-blower case

09/14/2009

Just won an Illinois whistle-blower case? Don’t rest easy yet! If you’re an employer that’s also covered by federal law, brace yourself for a federal whistle-blower lawsuit, too.

FMLA: Treat leave request involving adult children similarly to those involving parents

09/14/2009

Generally, employees aren’t entitled to FMLA leave to care for adult children who suffer from serious health conditions—unless the child is disabled. The test is whether the child suffers from a physical or mental disability that makes self-care impossible.

Check for subordinate bias before disciplining boss

09/14/2009

Here’s a problem you may not see coming: A group of employees comes forward and complains about a supervisor’s management skills. You decide to take action and demote the supervisor. Before you act, check for potential bias if the supervisor is of a different ethnicity, race or other protected classification than the subordinates.

Recovered addict not automatically disabled

09/14/2009

Employees who have successfully dealt with drug addiction but don’t have any current or continuing drug problems are not disabled under the ADA , as the following case shows.

Fired driver files suits over false-positive drug test

09/14/2009

A recent Illinois case illustrates how employers can get into expensive litigation if their drug-testing vendors don’t follow proper procedures when conducting random drug tests.

Age discrimination harder to prove following 7th Circuit ruling

09/14/2009

The 7th Circuit’s recent opinion in Martino v. MCI represents the first opportunity for that court to apply the U.S. Supreme Court’s recently clarified standard for determining liability in disparate-treatment cases brought under the ADEA. Together, the two decisions make it harder for employees to win some age discrimination lawsuits.

What’s the new law? Must we now provide health insurance to employees’ adult children?

09/14/2009

Q. I understand that Illinois has passed a new law requiring certain employer-provided insurance policies to cover an employee’s dependents who are up to age 26 (or up to age 30 in some instances). Which employers and which policies are affected by the new law?