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Illinois

Give all employees a shot at advancement

11/12/2008

If some of your managers and supervisors steer career and business opportunities to favored subordinates and keep others from finding out about them, watch out. If those missed opportunities wind up depriving employees of potential financial rewards, that could lead to discrimination lawsuits.

Get attorney’s help when settling injury cases

11/12/2008

Sometimes, employees who are hurt while driving company cars have two separate claims against their employers: one for possible negligence involving the automobile, and another involving workers’ comp benefits for an on-the-job injury. If you decide to settle the negligence claim, have your attorneys review the settlement agreement.

Document rationale for rejecting every job applicant—and stick with it

11/12/2008

Before you reject a candidate who appears to meet the basic requirements for an open position, make sure you can explain your decision. Then document your rationale in case he or she later claims the real reason for the rejection was some form of discrimination.

OK to reject applicant who volunteers that disability can’t be accommodated

11/12/2008

If an applicant discloses a disability and says she can’t perform the job’s essential functions even with an accommodation, you can turn her down. You don’t have to second-guess her assessment and look for a reasonable accommodation.

Sometimes a personality conflict is nothing more

11/12/2008

Some supervisors like some subordinates more than others. As long as any personality conflict isn’t based on some protected characteristic such as age, race or sex, there is no need to worry that treating some employees more harshly than others will result in a winning lawsuit for the employee.

Employees can’t wait years to sue for intentional harm

11/12/2008

Sometimes, it seems as though employees spend all their time thinking up new ways to sue. At least now, courts are stopping some of the most frivolous claims by insisting employees act fast—or forget about the alleged wrongdoing.

Illini faculty, staff rally for political rights

11/12/2008

In October, the University of Illinois released a statement informing students and faculty that a state ethics law bars state workers from political activities on campus. Students and faculty protested, claiming the university was trampling on their First Amendment rights.

McDonald’s exec drops board duty, ending boycott

11/12/2008

The American Family Association (AFA) ended a five-month boycott of Oakbrook-based McDonald’s after a company executive resigned his seat on the board of the National Gay and Lesbian Chamber of Commerce.

CAIR reports rise in religious discrimination complaints

11/12/2008

The Council on American-Islamic Relations (CAIR) reports that bias complaints by Muslim workers increased by 18% in 2007, reaching a record 452 cases. Complaints by Muslim job applicants also rose by 34%.

States look to tax collection to fill empty coffers

11/12/2008

Several states, including Illinois, California, Massachusetts and New York, are cracking down on sales tax cheats to fill state coffers drained by the tanking economy, the Associated Press recently reported.