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North Carolina

Want to catch harassment? Go looking for it

06/23/2011
More than a decade after the U.S. Supreme Court decided its biggest sexual harassment and hostile work-environment cases, women are still filing and winning sexual harassment lawsuits. Many of them could easily have been prevented had HR and upper-level management taken regular, surprise walks through the factory floor and other work areas.

6 steps to take if one of your employees gets arrested

06/17/2011
With a record number of Ameri­cans now in prison and police and prosecutors increasingly taking a hard line on crime of all kinds, more employers are finding themselves unprepared to answer the question: “What do I do now that one of my employees got arrested?”

Failure to investigate alleged harassment brings EEOC lawsuit

06/17/2011
B.J. Con-Sew faces national-origin harassment charges after a Hispanic employee claims he was forced to ­resign to avoid daily harassment. The employee claims he complained to various managers, but no investigation or assistance was forthcoming. Eventually, he quit and filed charges with the EEOC.

Tarheel Medical Transport faces PDA suit over forced leave

06/01/2011

The EEOC is suing Tarheel Medical Transport, alleging the Wilson County company forced pregnant employees to take leaves of absences until after their children were born. The lawsuit claims the policy violates the federal Pregnancy Dis­crimi­nation Act.

Bill would require unemployed to volunteer five hours a week

06/01/2011

A bill sponsored by state Sen. Warren Daniel would require North Caro­­linians who have been on unemployment for more than eight weeks to volunteer five hours a week in order to continue receiving benefits. The volunteer commitment would rise to 10 hours per week for those on the unemployment rolls for more than a year.

Dillard’s must take $50,000 from till to pay for age bias

06/01/2011
Managers at the Dillard’s department store in Cary have learned the hard way that forcing out older workers simply because of their age doesn’t pay.

In Randleman, gender and disability bias cost big bucks

06/01/2011
Ohio-based Timken Co. will pay $120,000 to settle a gender and disability complaint from a woman who worked at the company’s ball bearing plant in Randleman.

Implement clear process for requesting promotion

06/01/2011

Employees who don’t apply for a job or promotion generally can’t sue over the lost opportunity. But if promotions are never announced and there’s no process to apply, employees and applicants can sue. That’s why it is crucial to have some sort of application process in place that allows you to track applications and prove who applied—and by default, who did not.

When reorganizing, focus on essential company goals

06/01/2011
At some point, every employer will have to reorganize to cut costs or im­­prove effectiveness. Don’t let those making the reorg decisions take the easy way out by simply eliminating positions held by disabled employees.

Disabled employee wants open position? That may be a reasonable accommodation

06/01/2011
Employers have an obligation to reasonably accommodate disabled employees. They can’t just ignore an accommodation request—especially if it involves the relatively simple step of placing the employee in an open job.