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The Battle Over Unions

February 22, 2011 Leave a comment

A N.Y.Times op ed piece on Wisconsin public unions pretty much nails the controversy going on with the survival of unions. Of course, all op eds are opinions only and as David Bohm so eloquently reminded us… “the truth does not emerge from an opinion.” What I find most interesting is the 700 comments posted which really shows the level and type of concerns on both sides. Reality is most of these rich retirement plans came into being…when we were rich! San Diego, where I live, is the classic example. The pension and unions are literally bankrupting the city and they seem to care less. They would rather keep to a level of benefit that few private employees get and instead reduce services and cut jobs from under their co-workers. In my years of practice I’ve litigated against and with unions. In my experience they both giveth and taketh away. Bottom line for employers is this: Treat your employees poorly and risk becoming unionized.

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New NLRB Website Launches with More Information and Greater Ease of Navigation

February 10, 2011 Leave a comment

Yesterday, the National Labor Relations Board announced the launch of a new agency website that is more flexible, timely, easy to navigate, and useful to a variety of audiences, from practitioners to first-time visitors.

The redesigned and re-imagined site, at www.nlrb.gov, builds on an overarching effort toward greater transparency and efficiency at the NLRB, which enforces federal labor laws covering most private sector employment.

 Among highlights of the new site:

  • More case information is available more quickly than ever before. All Board decisions are now posted to the site at the time they are issued, rather than after a three-day holding period. The Board is also for the first time posting unpublished decisions, which do not appear in the official bound volumes of Board decisions. Additional documents from Washington and the regional offices not previously available will be posted to the site over time.
     
  • The website showcases a new case-management system that has been coming online at the agency for more than a year, and will be deployed to all regional offices by the end of this fiscal year. The new single system replaces 13 separate case tracking systems, and will allow for seamless searches that cover the entire life of a case at the agency. Each case is assigned its own page, where information and documents are posted. More information and documents will be added over time as the rollout of the new system is completed.
     
  • For the first time, the agency’s 32 regional offices – where all cases and elections begin – are prominently highlighted in the new site. An interactive map shows regional boundaries and allows visitors to quickly locate their own regional office. One click away is a page for each region that lists top officials and features newsletters, news releases and local cases and decisions.
     
  • A data section tracks NLRB activities over the years by the numbers. The section launches with eight charts and tables covering a variety of indicators, from charges filed to back pay collected. More charts and tables, with greater interactivity, will be added through the year.
     
  • Improved navigation will make it far easier for visitors to find their way, and new pages explain the NLRB processes and functions in accessible language. At the same time, all the case-handling manuals, memos and forms found on the old website will be available on the new one.

The new NLRB website is a reflection of Chairman Wilma Liebman’s advocacy for a more open and engaged agency. Other recent developments to that end include increased use of press releases to describe activities in Washington and the regions, a subscription service that allows users to choose email delivery of press releases, decisions and memos, and active Facebook and Twitter accounts.

The National Labor Relations Board is an independent federal agency vested with the power to safeguard employees’ rights to organize and to determine whether to have unions as their bargaining representative. The agency also acts to prevent and remedy unfair labor practices committed by private sector employers and unions. To sign up for email delivery of these releases or other NLRB documents, or to change your subscriber preferences, please click here.

Settlement Reached in Case Involving Discharge for Facebook Comments

February 8, 2011 Leave a comment

A settlement has been reached in a case involving the discharge of a Connecticut ambulance service employee for posting negative comments about a supervisor on her Facebook page.
 
The NLRB’s Hartford regional office issued a complaint against American Medical Response of Connecticut, Inc., on October 27, 2010,  alleging that the discharge violated federal labor law because the employee was engaged in protected activity when she posted the comments about her supervisor, and responded to further comments from her co-workers. Under the National Labor Relations Act, employees may discuss the terms and conditions of their employment with co-workers and others.
 
The NLRB complaint also alleged that the company maintained overly-broad rules in its employee handbook regarding blogging, Internet posting, and communications between employees, and that it had illegally denied union representation to the employee during an investigatory interview shortly before the employee posted the negative comments on her Facebook page.
 
Under the terms of the settlement approved February 7, 2011 by Hartford Regional Director Jonathan Kreisberg, the company agreed to revise its overly-broad rules to ensure that they do not improperly restrict employees from discussing their wages, hours and working conditions with co-workers and others while not at work, and that they would not discipline or discharge employees for engaging in such discussions.
 
The company also promised that employee requests for union representation will not be denied in the future and that employees will not be threatened with discipline for requesting union representation. The allegations involving the employee’s discharge were resolved through a separate, private agreement between the employee and the company.
 
The National Labor Relations Board is an independent federal agency vested with the authority to safeguard employees’ rights to organize and to determine whether to have a union as their collective bargaining representative, and to prevent and remedy unfair labor practices committed by private sector employers and unions.

A Big Week for Big Labor

February 1, 2011 Leave a comment

By Amy Moor Gaylord and Chris Johlie of Worklaw Network firm Franczek Radelet.

Last week saw a number of new developments for organized labor.  On Wednesday, January 26, 2011,  President Obama re-nominated former SEIU General Counsel Craig Becker to the National Labor Relations Board (NLRB).  Obama previously nominated Becker to the NLRB in July 2009 but the nomination was blocked by the Senate in February 2010.  The vote took place amid strong opposition to Becker’s nomination by management and employer groups, which raised concerns that Becker would circumvent Congress by implementing portions of the proposed Employee Free Choice Act through NLRB decisions, and citing his radical views about union organizing campaigns and representation elections.

Since March 2010, Becker has served on the NLRB in a recess appointment which expires at the end of 2011 unless further action is taken.  Since his recess appointment, additional concerns have been raised in response to Becker’s refusal to recuse himself in cases involving local unions affiliated with the SEIU or AFL-CIO.  Indeed, Becker has recused himself in only one case involving his former employer, a case in which he acted as counsel of record prior to his recess appointment.  In connection with the NLRB’s decision in Pomona Valley Hospital Medical Center, 355 NLRB No. 40 (June 8, 2010), Becker denied a series of pending motions for recusal and expressed his view that he is only obligated to recuse himself in cases in which the SEIU international itself is a party, and not any of its locals.  The distinction is questionable at best, given the international union’s strong control over its locals.
 
Becker’s nomination comes on the heels of Acting General Counsel Lafe Solomon’s December 2010 memorandum directing the NLRB’s Regional Offices to seek a variety of remedies in unfair labor practice cases involving union organizing campaigns.  These remedies are designed to marginalize the employer’s involvement in the union representation process, one of Becker’s stated goals.  The NLRB has not had a Democratic majority since 2001, and it seems poised to take whatever steps it can, while it can, to handcuff employers during the union organizing process. 
 
The business community has pledged to fight the nomination.  In response to the news, Glenn Spencer, an executive director for the Chamber of Commerce, stated, “We’ve now had a year to see what he [Becker] actually will do, and I think that kind of confirms some of our issues with this nominee.”  Katie Gage, executive director of the Workforce Fairness Institute, commented, “In renominating Becker, President Obama has sent the message to employers across the country that his rhetoric is just that and the nation’s chief executive is more concerned with paying back union bosses than turning the economy around.  We will work with small-business owners to ensure the Senate once again rejects the Becker nomination.”


On Thursday, January 27, 2011,  U.S. Senator Jim DeMint (R-South Carolina) introduced the Secret Ballot Protection Act (SBPA),  which would guarantee workers the right to vote in a secret ballot election on whether to unionize.  The Bill has 17 co-sponsors including Senators Lamar Alexander (R-Tennessee), John Barrasso (R-Wyoming), Richard Burr (R-North Carolina), Saxby Chambliss (R-Georgia), Thad Cochran (R-Mississippi), Mike Enzi (R-Wyoming), Lindsey Graham (R-South Carolina), James Inhofe (R-Oklahoma), Jon Kyl (R-Arizona), John McCain (R-Arizona), Jerry Moran (R-Oklahoma), Rand Paul (R-Kentucky), James Risch (R-Idaho), Richard Shelby (R-Alabama), John Thune (R-South Dakota), David Vitter (R-Louisiana) and Roger Wicker (R-Mississippi). 
 
The Bill would amend the National Labor Relations Act (NLRA) to make it an unfair labor practice for an employer to recognize, or bargain with, a union that has not been selected by a majority of employees in a secret ballot election conducted by the NLRB. It also would make it an unfair labor practice for a union to cause or attempt to cause an employer to recognize or bargain with a union that has not been selected in a secret ballot NLRB election.  

The Bill has been introduced several times in the past, most recently in February 2009, but has not garnered the needed support.  It is not insignificant that its re-introduction comes shortly after the NLRB’s threats to sue Arizona, South Carolina, South Dakota and Utah over constitutional amendments guaranteeing workers the right to a secret ballot in union elections, similar to the SBPA.   NLRB General Counsel Lafe Solomon has stated that the amendments conflict with federal law, which gives employers the option of recognizing a union if a majority of workers sign cards that support unionization. 

The Attorneys General of Arizona, South Carolina, South Dakota and Utah have responded to Solomon stating: “We reject your demand to ‘stipulate to the unconstitutionality’ of these amendments. These state laws protect long existing federal rights, and we will vigorously defend any legal attack upon them. That the NLRB would use its resources to sue our States for constitutionally guaranteeing the right to vote by a secret ballot is extraordinary, and we urge you to reconsider your decision.  The voters of our States overwhelmingly support the laws that you threaten to challenge. Indeed, 86% of South Carolina’s voters approved the amendment supporting secret ballots. Likewise, the voters in Utah, South Dakota and Arizona approved constitutional amendments protecting secret ballots by votes of 60%, 79% and 61% respectively.”
 

More Information

Protest Banners OK’d by NLRB

September 15, 2010 Leave a comment

In a recent press release, the NLRB ruled that those big SHAME banners you see across downtown office buildings and other establishments are OK.

You can read it and know this could happen to you by going to http://www.nlrb.gov/About_Us/News_Room/template_html.aspx?file=http://www.nlrb.gov/shared_files/Press%20Releases/2010/R-2780.htm

NLRB Issues First Decisions Involving Returned Two-Member Cases

Also posts database of all two-member Board decisions with status updates

The National Labor Relations Board today issued its first decisions in cases that were returned to it by the federal courts of appeals following a Supreme Court ruling that the Board was not authorized to decide cases when it had only two members, Chairman Wilma Liebman and Member Peter Schaumber.

Also today, the Agency made public a database of all contested cases that were decided by the two-member Board. The list of cases, available here and via the Agency website at www.nlrb.gov, includes links to original documents and case status updates that will be refreshed daily. A full data set of all the cases is also available in xml format for download.

From January 2008 to April 2010, the Board operated with three of its five seats vacant. During that 27-month period, the two remaining members issued nearly 600 decisions. On June 17, a divided Supreme Court ruled that the two-member Board was not authorized to issue decisions.

Since then, dozens of the two-member decisions that had been challenged in federal appellate courts have been returned to the Board for new consideration.

Meanwhile, hundreds of the other two-member cases were closed through compliance with the original Board decision, settlement, withdrawal or other means. Still more are in some stage of litigation or compliance stemming from the original decision. It is unclear how many of those rulings can or will be contested.

The four decisions issued today were in cases that had been pending in federal appeals courts at the time of the Supreme Court decision, and were returned to the Board.

The cases are: SPE Utility Contractors, LLC, 7-CA-50767 (unlawful discharge); Chrysler, LLC, 7-CA-51553 (refusal to provide information); ADF, Inc., 1-CA-45068 (repudiation of collective bargaining agreement and withdrawal of recognition); and Regal Health and Rehabilitation Center, 13-CA-44481, et al. (unlawful conduct during organizing campaign, with bargaining order granted).

The Board is now at full strength with five members. As described in an earlier press release, each case returned to the Board will be considered by a three-member panel which will include Chairman Liebman and Board Member Schaumber. Consistent with Board practice, the two other Board members not on the panel will have the opportunity to participate in the case if they so desire.

The National Labor Relations Board is an independent federal agency vested with the power to safeguard employees’ rights to organize and to determine whether to have unions as their bargaining representative. The agency also acts to prevent and remedy unfair labor practices committed by private sector employers and unions.

August 2010 Compliance and Culture Newsletter

August 1, 2010 4 comments

“Most people don’t need a boss. They need someone to listen to them.”    – Maurice Mascarenhas

This month’s newsletter discusses the following topics:

  • Editor’s Column: The Big HR Show
  • ADEA Claims: What’s Reasonable?
  • Employment Litigation in the News
  • A Change of Schedule Can Create a Reasonable Accommodation
  • Beware of Classifying All Managers in All Locations as Exempt
  • Classifying Workers as Independent Contractors: Risky Business
  • National Labor Relations Act Turns 75
  • Speaking of the NLRB…
  • Good Ol’ Boys Can’t Have It Their Way
  • DOL Delivers on Promises to Help Workers
  • Discovering Problems While Employees are on Leave
  • Form of the Month: Two Kinds of HR

Please click here to view the newsletter in PDF format.

Editor’s Column: The Big HR Show

Since I hadn’t been to a SHRM convention in a number of years, I felt it was my duty to attend one since it was occurring here in San Diego. After poring through the workshops, speaking to dozens of HR professionals and vendors, and roaming the entire exhibit hall, here’s what I observed:

  1. HR is BIG business. There are approximately 10,000 attendees and the convention takes up the entire San Diego Convention Center (which is quite large). There were more than 150 concurrent sessions over the four days of the convention. The keynote speakers were Al Gore and Steve Forbes, (neither of which I had any interest in listening to- and neither of whom have anything to share about HR. Just ask the folks who heard them!). Other well- known names included Marcus Buckingham, Dave Ramsey, and David Ulrich.
  2. I’m sure many of the attendees were there to earn up to 29 recertification credits in one lump toward their PHR, SPHR, or GPHR certifications (60 are required every three years).
  3. The convention discussed a wide variety of subjects, broken down into:
    • Employment law and legislation
    • Strategic management
    • International management
    • International HR
    • Total rewards
    • Personal and skilled development
  4. The breadth of workshops offered was as broad as the HR experience itself: Everything from hiring employees to letting them go and everything in between. Frankly, I didn’t see much new except everybody’s increased panic on how to manage healthcare benefits.
  5. For an HR professional to attend the program it cost at least $1,200 in registration fees, plus $750 on room and board, and $500 in plane fare unless they drove here. This expense alone rules out many small company practitioners.
  6. The company size of attendee broke down this way:
    • Fewer than 100: 16.59%
    • 101-499: 22.90%
    • 500-999: 12.25%
    • 1,000-9,999: 27.09%
    • Greater than 10,000: 21.80%

When it comes to the “weight” of the total employee population, companies with more than 1,000 employees dwarfed the conference.

I spent time going through the enormous vendor floor. According to SHRM, there were more than 565 executive exhibitors in a variety of groups:

  • Compensation and benefits
  • Employee relations
  • Employee selection/staffing
  • Health, wellness, and safety
  • HRM services
  • HR information and systems
  • Training and Development

By far, the largest vendors were the recruitment sites (Monster, Yahoo, HotJobs, etc.) and the Payroll/PEOs vendors (ADP, Ceridian, PayChex, etc.).

In trying to get a sense of where the “buzz” was, the longest line I witnessed was roughly 30 women waiting for Erik Estrada’s (yes, that Erik Estrada from CHIPs) autograph.

Experts were doing live presentations to small audiences, some with very interactive screenings of their programs, and there were surprisingly large number of educational providers. All in all, the experience reminded me very much of the last convention I attended in San Diego.

The reality is that most of the companies in the HR That Works range of 15-500 employees get very little play at this conference. There’s certainly plenty geared toward large organizations. I can see every reason why vendors have an incentive to focus there. Not a single vendor said that they focus on smaller employers.

Most of the companies that use our program don’t send their employees off for MBA programs, buy FMLA tracking software, use elaborate employee incentive programs, recruit globally, or need an elaborate performance management system. What these companies do need is to be great at HR basics — the blocking and tackling stuff:

  • Hiring the right people
  • Knowing how to make them productive
  • Making sure that you can keep productive and trustworthy employees
  • Training them to ratchet up their performance
  • Getting them to play team ball
  • Keeping your managers and employees from doing anything stupid that would get you sued

I came away from this convention ever more assured that we’re going down the right path by focusing on the needs of companies with 15 to 500 employees. Let me know how we can help your company!

ADEA Claims: What’s Reasonable?

In light of recent U.S. Supreme Court cases, the EEOC has proposed regulations to address the scope of the “reasonable factors other than age” (RFOA) defense available to employers under the Age Discrimination Employment Act (ADEA). According to the EEOC, there are six non-exhaustive factors to consider in determining whether an employment practice is reasonable.

  1. Where the employment practice and manner of its implementation are common business practices.
  2. The extent to which the factor is related to the employer’s stated business goals.
  3. The extent to which the employer took steps to define the factor accurately and apply it accurately and fairly (e.g., training, guidance, instruction of managers).
  4. The extent to which the employer took steps to assess the adverse impact of its employment practices on older workers.
  5. The severity of the harm to the individuals within the protected age group, in terms of both the degree of injury and number of persons affected adversely, and the extent to which the employer took preventative or corrective steps to minimize the severity of the harm, in light of the burden of undertaking such steps.
  6. Whether other options were available and the reasons the employer selected the option it did.

The EEOC said that it also looks into whether supervisors (a) have unchecked discretion to assess employees subjectively;( b) evaluate employees based on factors known to be subject of age-based stereotypes; and (c) receive guidance or training about how to apply the factors and avoid discrimination. To avoid unnecessary disparate impact and other discrimination type claims, consider these factors whenever you make an employment-related decision, especially if you terminate a group of employees. 

Employment Litigation in the News

A review of employment cases during one recent month included these topics:

1. Public policy violation/whistleblower 10. Trade secret/non-competition agreements
2. Breach of contract/implied covenant 11. Workers compensation/OSHA
3. Fraud 12. Independent Contract
4. Defamation 13. Respondeat superior
5. Wage/hour 14. Privacy
6. Discrimination 15. Arbitration
7. Harassment 16. Attorneys and attorneys’ fees
8. Retaliation 17. Statutes of limitation
9. Interference with contractual relations 18. And others

Here are a few recent employment litigation-related headlines:

     

  • Sales Representatives $480,000 Wrongful Termination Award is Affirmed
  • Evidence Supported Whistleblowers’ Discrimination Claim, but Not Sexual Harassment
  • Undocumented Workers Had Standing to Assert Violation of Prevailing Wage Law
  • Employee Who Was Threatened and Assaulted by Co-Workers Stated Wrongful Termination Claim
  • Employer Could Recover Training Costs from Employee, But Can’t Recover Same from Final Check
  • Housekeeper’s Award of $70,000 in Unpaid Wages Affirmed
  • Employee Who Provided Customer Service and Training Related to Company Software Not Exempt from Overtime
  • Employer Bears Burden of Showing Reasonableness of Layoff Criteria in Age Discrimination Case
  • $1.8 Million Judgment Affirmed in Favor of Employee Discriminated Against on the Basis of Race and Gender
  • Employee Who Requested Medical Leave for Depression While Working for Another Employer May Have Been Improperly Terminated
  • Court Upholds $1.088 Million Verdict in Favor of Terminated Italian National

These are just a few example of the numerous, off-the-wall HR exposures your business might face. None of these companies ever planned on getting in the headlines — at least not like this! As you can see from many of the titles, employment practice claims might not be frequent: but when you face one, they tend to be severe. By the way, I didn’t list headlines about case verdicts favoring employers. Although these are rare, they still end up costing companies tens of thousands, if not hundreds of thousands of dollars, just to be “right.” 

A Change of Schedule Can Create a Reasonable Accommodation

In Colwell vs. Rite Aid Corporation, defense counsel posed a unique argument that the court quickly dismissed. Essentially, a clerk at Rite Aid suffered from glaucoma and asked that she have her shift changed from nights to days since she felt it was dangerous to drive at night, given her vision problems. The manager refused to make the requested accommodation, saying it would not be fair to the other employees who would, of course, also prefer the day shift over the night shift There were also concerns that seniority and other factors justified not providing her the requested accommodation.

In a last-ditch effort to convince the court in the reasonableness if their denial, Rite Aid argued that she was fine while she was at work, where she did not need an accommodation, and that the act of getting her to work was not their problem. As you can imagine, the court made mincemeat of this argument, essentially saying that changing someone’s work schedule is a reasonable accommodation.

Here’s the specific language of the ADA:

“The term ‘reasonable accommodation’ may include a) making existing facilities used by employees readily accessible to, and usable by, individuals with disabilities; and, b) job restructuring, part-time, or modified work schedules (emphasis added), reassignment to a vacant position, acquisition; or modification of equipment or devices; appropriate adjustments or modifications of examinations, training materials or policies; the provision of qualified readers or interpreters and other similar accommodations for individuals with disabilities.”

As a side note, the employee quit, claiming a “constructive discharge: because of the failure to accommodate.” Although the court agreed with her accommodation argument, it did not agree with her constructive discharge case because she made little effort to resolve the accommodation issue.

Remember this: A company must engage in accommodation unless it creates an “undue burden.” The courts have reminded us that this does not mean an inconvenience for the employer; it means an “undue burden’ – a standard that Rite Aid could not meet. When discussing the breakdown in the interactive process which led to the workers constructive discharge, the court reminded us that, “A party who fails to communicate, by way of initiation or response, may also be acting in bad faith. In essence, courts should attempt to isolate the cause of the breakdown and then assign responsibility … the last act in the interactive process is not always the cause of a breakdown … the court must examine the evidence as a whole to determine whether the evidence requires a finding that one party’s bad faith caused the breakdown.”

Lesson: Don’t forget about the ADA language set forth above. The effort to make these accommodations is an employer’s obligation unless it results in an undue burden. Don’t give up on the interactive process. Employers run into trouble when they pre-suppose that something would be an undue burden to the company. Our advice is that unless safety, security, or other critical issues are involved, you should let the employee attempt the accommodation and only then determine if it is an undue strain on the employer.

Beware of Classifying All Managers in All Locations as Exempt

In Arenas vs. El Torito Restaurants, a California appellate court ruled on the possibility of a class action lawsuit for the misclassification of all managers at the El Torito restaurants as exempt.

Although the court gave a lengthy analysis about the appropriateness of the class action case, for our purposes, what’s important was that it warned employers that just because managers might be exempt at one store they might not be exempt at another store. It depends on the circumstances.

At some El Torito restaurants, many of the managers also did work performed by the staff or busboys. In other larger, busier restaurants, they did less of this work. Employers should determine whether managers are exempt on a case-by-case basis unless there’s complete uniformity in operations.

The plaintiff’s complaint also lays out the laundry list of exposures employers face by misclassifying managers as exempt; violation of wage and overtime regulations, failure to furnish wage and hour statements, or not providing rest and meal periods.

Classifying Workers as Independent Contractors: Risky Business

JustMed v. Byce, a decision by the 9th Circuit Court of Appeals, involved whether Byce, a programmer, owned the source code of devices owned by JustMed.

The court ruled that, given the facts of the case, Byce was an employee rather than an independent contractor. If the court had decided that Byce were an independent contractor, he would own the rights to the source code because it was not contracted to be a work for hire. This is one of the risks of using the independent contractor label – something many early-growth employers do to avoid the burden of managing payroll and other functions.

Lesson: If you’re going to hire an independent contractor to work on a project that you want to own, make sure that the independent contractor agreement contains “work for hire” language in it. Otherwise, it’s safer to treat this person as an employee for payroll and other purposes, so that their employment status would make their contribution become a work for hire.

National Labor Relations Act Turns 75

Whether you love it or hate it, the NLRA created a worldwide watershed in industrial relations. They have put up an excellent website celebrating the historical event.

Speaking of the NLRB…

On July 1, 2010, the NLRB outlined its plan for considering two-member cases in wake of the Supreme Court’s New Process Steel ruling.

In response to numerous inquiries, the National Labor Relations Board outlined its plans for handling returned cases following the Supreme Court’s recent decision in New Process Steel v. NLRB that the Board no power to decide cases when three of its five seats were vacant. [Editor’s note: This decision gave the green light to the process of dismantling the Bush era pro-employer decisions.]

During a 27-month period that ended with the recess appointments of two members last March, the Board operated with two members: Current Chairman Wilma Liebman and former Chairman and Board Member Peter Schaumber. They decided nearly 600 cases on which they could agree, while those remaining were held for additional Board members.

At the time of the June 17 Supreme Court decision, 96 of the two-member decisions were pending on appeal before the federal courts – six at the Supreme Court and 90 in various Courts of Appeals. The Board is seeking to have each of these cases remanded to the Board for further consideration.

Each of the remanded cases will be considered by a three-member panel of the Board, which will include Chairman Liebman and Board Member Schaumber. Consistent with Board practice, the two other Board members not on the panel will have the opportunity to participate in the case if they so desire.

It’s unclear at this time how many of the two-member Board rulings not already challenged in the federal appellate courts can or will be contested and how many may now be moot.

For the first time since December 2007, the Board is now at full strength, with the addition of Member Brian Hayes, who was sworn in on June 30. Last week, the Senate confirmed Mr. Hayes and Board Member Mark Pearce. Member Pearce originally received a recess appointment to the Board from President Obama in March, along with Board Member Craig Becker.

The National Labor Relations Board is an independent federal agency vested with the power to safeguard employees’ rights to organize and to determine whether to have unions as their bargaining representative. The agency also acts to prevent and remedy unfair labor practices committed by private sector employers and unions.

Lesson: The NLRA passed, creating the NLRB, 75 years ago to protect employees due to manipulative and abusive employer practices. Like it or not, the Bush administration was the most employer friendly in 30 years; In effect they purposely paralyzed the NLRB by not adding new appointments. Now the pendulum is swinging back. If you’re an HR That Works Member, we encourage you to watch the Webinar “Union Organizing and the New National Labor Relations Board: What You Need to Know to Be Prepared.”

Good Ol’ Boys Can’t Have It Their Way

In Merritt vs. Old Dominion Freight Line, the plaintiff claimed that the company discriminated by refusing to make her a short-haul truck driver. She argued that she was denied positions twice, when she was more qualified than the males who were hired. Then after suffering an injury on the job, she claimed the company used this injury as an excuse to terminate her as being “unfit for duty.”

Unfortunately for Old Dominion, the plaintiff’s (male) manager had made frequent statements such as “This is no place for a woman”. Eventually the manager, who had already made it known that he didn’t like women driving trucks, fired her when she failed the fit-for-duty exam which was used primarily for pre-hire physicals. Not only was the exam far too broad in scope for her injury, the company did not give it to many of the men who suffered similar injuries.

In discussing the return-to-work exam, the court stated:

“We begin by acknowledging that, if indeed, Old Dominion had such a policy (to conduct a full exam of all return-to-work employees) and faithfully abided by it, that fact would, as Old Dominion suggests, be a neutral and legitimate business practice. Old Dominion has understandable safety concerns, especially since its employees are responsible for driving large trucks and carrying heavy freight. A policy of the sort Old Dominion claims to have is sensible, because it helps prevent an injured employee from further aggravating an injury, thereby jeopardizing the eventual recovery; ensure that an employee’s job performance is not so impaired as to endanger public safety, diminish employee morale, or generate customer complaints; and limit Old Dominion’s workers compensation claims and tort liability. Moreover, it is not to say what policies a company should or should not adopt, if the policies it does adopt are gender-neutral.”

As the court stated, the problem with the policy lies not in theory but in practice.

Lesson: Whether it’s an all-male truck-driving environment or an all-female nursing environment, employers cannot create smokescreens in order to discriminate. In this case, there were no HR checks and balances on the manager’s decision to fire the plaintiff. It’s a good idea to have a policy, enforce it uniformly, and make sure someone else in the organization (preferably the HR department, if you have one) signs off on all termination decisions.

DOL Delivers on Promises to Help Workers

Several recent events prove that the U.S. Department of Labor (DOL) is set to deliver on its previous promises that it will go to great lengths to help workers, at the expense of employers.

As we’ve informed you in previous newsletters, the DOL has received significant funding for investigating employers who misclassify workers as independent contractors or as exempt from the overtime provisions of the Fair Labor Standards Act. A DOL news release issued April 22, 2010, indicated that the DOL has requested $12 million for this initiative in 2011 alone, and that the department is working closely on these initiatives with the Vice President’s Middle Class Task Force. In the news release, Secretary of Labor Hilda Solis vowed to “help middle-class families remain in the middle class.”

Just before this, in March 2010, the DOL announced its intent to stop a longstanding practice of issuing fact-specific opinion letters to employers. For nearly a decade, employers with questions regarding federal wage and hour laws could seek the department’s opinion on whether they were in compliance, which could serve as evidence of an employer’s good faith efforts if they were sued. Now, however, the DOL will only issue opinions that “set forth a general interpretation of the law and regulations, applicable across-the-board to all those affected by the provision at issue. The DOL contends that this will be a much more efficient and productive use of resources than attempting to provide definitive opinion letters in response to fact-specific requests submitted by individuals and organizations, where a slight difference in the facts could change the outcome.” This position is set forth on the DOL Web site at www.dol.gov/whd/opinion/opinion.htm. Of course, the net effect of this shift away from fact-specific opinion letters is even less guidance for employers than before.

The department made this announcement about the same time that it issued an opinion letter finding mortgage loan officers non-exempt (despite employers’ arguments that they were white-collar administrative employees in accordance with a prior DOL opinion letter issued during the Bush administration, which found such employees exempt).

Also, in May 2010, Secretary Solis signed a Workers’ Rights Joint Declaration along with Ambassador Sarukhan of Mexico, committing to “inform Mexican workers in the United States about their labor rights through information sharing, outreach, education, training, and exchange of best practices.” This declaration will clearly lead to more complaints, investigations, penalties, and the use of employer resources.

Lesson: Collectively, these actions amply demonstrate that the current DOL is preparing (if it has not already begun) to get tough on employers. Consequently, you should redouble your efforts to classify workers properly and make sure that your pay practices comply fully with the law.

Article courtesy of Work law® Network firm Pilchak Cohen & Tice (www.mi-worklaw.com).

Discovering Problems While Employees are on Leave

In responding to HR That Works Hotline calls over the years, one of the greatest concerns employers express involves handling the situation in which a worker is on leave when the employer discovers their inefficiencies, wrongful conduct, etc. The employers worry about the employee’s argument that any discipline or termination alleging these deficiencies is really masking retaliation for being on ADA, FMLA, or other types of leave.

In Schaaf vs. Smith Kline Beecham the United States District Court in Georgia ruled that the plaintiff’s management style, as well as deficiencies discovered in her absence, led to her being demoted from regional vice president to a district sales manager while on maternity leave. In a novel argument, the plaintiff’s claim went like this: (1) Smith Kline Beecham (SKB) learned of her shortcomings while she was on leave, and (2) the company would not have discovered these derelictions had she not taken leave. Thus, taking leave caused her demotion! In dismissing such nonsense, the court reminded the plaintiff that, “The fact that the leave permitted the employer to discover the problems cannot logically be a bar to the employer’s ability to fire the deficient employee.” Even though the FMLA leave allowed the employer to uncover prior deficiencies does not mean that the termination was because of the FMLA leave. Most telling in this situation is that the plaintiff had very little evidence to prove the motivation of the employer was discriminatory, other than her demotion while on maternity leave.

Lesson: Employers can easily fall into a trap when they discover deficiencies while employees are on leave. If you choose to discipline or terminate the employee because of these deficiencies, you might well face a claim of retaliation – unless you can prove your argument about their deficiencies to a judge or jury.

Form of the Month

Two Kinds of HR (PDF)

Which kind are you? Use this form as a “head check” on how you view yourself in the HR role. This holds true for full-time practitioners, as well as for the folks wearing three hats. Even if you do HR part time, your goal should be to do it well.

(HR That Works Users can access this form in Word format by logging on to the site).

Podcast

Please click here to listen to this month’s newsletter podcast.

 

Important Employment Law Bulletin

One of our Worklaw Partners, Lehr, Middlebrooks and Vreeland (www.lehrmiddlebrooks.com) produces an excellent newsletter. March’s newsletter discusses the recent Obama appointments to the NLRB. This is an important read for all employers, not just those already unionized. One more reason to attend the Webinar: Union Organizing and the New National Labor Relations Board: What You Need to Know to Be Prepared on May 11th at 2:00PM EST (11:00AM PST) with ­­­­­­­­­­­­­­­­­­­­­­­­­­John Simmons of Kiesewetter Wise (another www.Worklaw.com firm).

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