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Jonathan Hyman

Congress’ employment law agenda: 7 key bills to watch closely

03/08/2010

Now that the Democrats have lost their 60-vote supermajority in the Senate, it will be that much more difficult for the Obama administration to make good on many of its pro-employee campaign promises. But this still could be a key year for Democratic plans to revamp our national employment laws. Here are seven key initiatives pending in Congress and what they could mean for your business if they become law.

Must we allow an employee’s ‘representative’ to sit in on investigative meetings?

02/11/2010

Q. We are a nonunion shop. One of our employees is currently under investigation for sexual harassment. He has asked to have a representative present during all meetings and interviews related to the investigation. Do we have to permit him to have representation?

7 bills to watch: Congress’ 2010 employment law agenda

02/09/2010

When Republican Scott Brown of Massachusetts won January’s special election to fill the seat long occupied by the late Sen. Ted Kennedy, Democrats lost their 60-vote supermajority in the Senate. That means it will be that much more difficult for the Obama administration to make good on many of its pro-employee campaign promises. That’s not to say those employment law initiatives are dead. The following are the key initiatives pending in Congress.

Is it legally risky to refuse to hire people who have been arrested?

02/09/2010

Q. I am considering putting a policy in place to prohibit hiring any job applicant found to have an arrest record. Are there any legal risks?

What legal hoops must we jump through if we conduct background checks on applicants?

02/09/2010

Q. I’ve never required background checks on any job applicants. To get a better understanding of whom we’re hiring, I’ve retained a professional screening company to begin vetting our candidates for things such as criminal convictions. Are there any specific protocols we should be following?

Why I represent management as an employment law attorney

01/11/2010

I practice management-side employment law because I want to help businesses better manage their talent. I am not so naive to think that employers fire people only for good reasons. Companies fire employees for lots of reasons—good, indifferent and unlawful. Every lawsuit, administrative charge and internal complaint is an opportunity for a company to learn from a mistake … It becomes an opportunity to train employers how to handle an employee-relations problem better the next time.

Can I legally refuse to hire job candidates who don’t share my political beliefs?

01/11/2010

Q. I run a small business and only want to employ people who are like-minded and share my core political values. Is it legal to refuse to hire a job candidate because of his or her political beliefs?

Is there any way to keep staff from speaking with former employee’s attorney?

01/11/2010

Q. A former employee recently sued my business for discrimination. A few current employees have told me that her lawyer has contacted them seeking information. Is there anything I can do to stop this?

Can I get online answers to pay questions?

01/11/2010

Q. Can you steer me toward any online information about how to correctly pay employees’ wages?

What can we do? Employee may have been faking need for FMLA leave

01/11/2010

Q. An employee went out of FMLA leave three weeks ago to undergo and recover from knee surgery. Last night, a reliable and trusted employee spotted him at the local YMCA playing a game of pick-up basketball. We now have serious doubts about the validity of his FMLA leave. Is there anything we can do?