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Employment Law

More EEOC investigations take the ‘personal’ touch

11/07/2012
The EEOC is increasingly investigating claims of discrimination by visiting employer workplaces, rather than conducting investigations via the phone and mail, according to attorney Neshesba Kittling. The EEOC’s goal: expand investigations of single charges into companywide class actions.

What’s a ‘reasonable’ accommodation? It’s your call, not the disabled employee’s

11/06/2012
Some disabled employees think the ADA lets them demand a specific accommodation for their disabilities. That’s simply not true. As long as the workplace changes are truly “reasonable” and actually accommodate the disability, you have done everything the law requires.

Discipline OK even if employee has complained

11/01/2012
Courts are consistently hesitant to second-guess well-founded employment decisions. Of course, they won’t let you get away with discriminating or retaliating against an employee for filing an EEOC complaint or lawsuit. But that doesn’t mean you can’t discipline an employee if she needs prodding to meet your legitimate expectations.

Nash Finch settles sex discrimination complaint

11/01/2012
Food wholesaler Nash Finch has settled complaints it discriminated against women at its Lumberton facility. Based in Minnesota, Nash Finch is the nation’s second largest food wholesaler and has received $14 million in federal contract payments since 2005.

Wilmington medical center settles ADA dispute for $146K

11/01/2012
The New Hanover Regional Medi­­cal Center in Wilmington will pay $146,000 to a class of applicants and employees because the hospital erroneously regarded them as disabled.

Court makes quick work of serial applicant’s lawsuit

11/01/2012
Have you ever faced an applicant who applies for every open position just because it’s easy to do—and then complains that she wasn’t chosen for any of them? A federal court made quick work of dismissing a lawsuit from one such applicant when it was clear she was overreaching.

Already decided who to hire? OK to refuse more applications

11/01/2012
You don’t have to accept any more applications after you have considered enough candidates to make a hiring decision—even if your sys­­tem still shows the position is open.

Want to arbitrate employment disputes? Ensure handbook doesn’t nix arbitration contract

11/01/2012

Some North Carolina employers include an arbitration agreement in their employment policies. Such agreements are legal and enforceable if they form a contract. But employers that include arbitration agreements in their employee handbooks may be making a mistake if they also declare that the handbook itself isn’t a contract.

A slur is a slur, no matter the language–and deserves harsh discipline

11/01/2012
You don’t tolerate slurs spoken in English, do you? Then don’t put up with vile, intolerant and demeaning speech in other languages. It’s the content that matters, not the language spoken.

Suspect employee has relapsed into drug use? Never say so without proof

11/01/2012

Under the ADA, it’s illegal for employers to discriminate against employees who have a history of drug addiction but who aren’t current users. Before you or anyone else in management comments on suspicions that an employee has backslid, make sure you have evidence to back the claim.