• The HR Specialist - Print Newsletter
  • HR Specialist: Employment Law
  • The HR Weekly

Employment Law

Firing a ‘That’s not in my job description’ complainer

10/17/2008

Q. The owner of our company recently fired an employee who refused to run a business-related errand. The employee said running errands wasn’t in his job description. Can he sue us for wrongful termination? …

Run FMLA leave concurrent with other leaves

10/17/2008

Q. One of our employees will be out for medical treatments for four to six weeks. He doesn’t want to use FMLA leave, just his accumulated sick and vacation days. We’re afraid he’ll use them up and then demand 12 weeks’ FMLA leave. Can we make him use FMLA leave first? …

Can we terminate employees on workers’ comp?

10/17/2008

Q. We have two employees who went out on workers’ compensation leave and never came back. They’re still listed as employees. Can we lay them off? …

Can we require workers to pay for their uniforms?

10/17/2008

Q. We’d like our retail staff to wear uniforms. Can we charge them for the uniforms? …

Connecticut becomes third state to recognize same-sex marriages

10/14/2008

By one vote, the Connecticut Supreme Court ruled that the state’s law requiring same-sex couples to enter into civil unions rather than marriages was unconstitutional. Connecticut now becomes the third state—after Massachusetts and California—to recognize same-sex marriages. Connecticut employers must now alter their employment policies and benefits to match the patchwork of federal and state laws that this decision creates.

Fire away if severance demands are unreasonable

10/14/2008

Wise HR professionals understand that, before jumping the gun and firing an employee who has filed a complaint, a thorough investigation is in order. But that’s when many employees try to negotiate a severance package in exchange for a resignation. If the investigation and negotiations drag on, can you discharge the employee for making what you consider unreasonable demands? …

Caring for grandchild qualifies for FMLA leave

10/14/2008

When an employee has a baby or adopts a child, it’s easy to determine that he or she is eligible for FMLA leave. But it gets murkier when the baby who needs care isn’t the employee’s own child. The FMLA regulations list eligible dependent children as those to whom the employee has “day-to-day responsibility to care for and financially support.”

Moping: The next best thing to going on strike

10/14/2008

They’re not allowed to go on strike, but nothing in the Broward Teachers Union contract says they have to be chipper. Broward County teachers spent the summer bargaining for better raises. When negotiations stalled, they headed back to school in a sour mood …

Workers committed same offense? Be sure to document why one got harsher penalty

10/14/2008

It’s critical for HR to back up every disciplinary decision with complete records showing exactly why an employee deserved his punishment. If a fired employee broke the same rule another employee did, those records better show you punished them equally—or explain why the punishment was different …

No individual liability under FMLA for public employers

10/14/2008

Good news if you work for a public employer in Florida. If you make an FMLA mistake, you can’t be sued individually, unlike your peers in the private sector …