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Employment Law

Honestly believe worker broke rule? Firing OK

07/13/2011
Here’s something to remember when you’re worried about firing someone because you might get sued: Judges don’t want to run HR departments. As long as HR acts honestly and believes the employee should be fired because she broke a company rule, chances are a lawsuit won’t ­succeed.

Milton car dealership settles wage-and-hour dispute

07/13/2011
Milton-based McKenzie Buick GMC has settled a dispute over minimum wage, overtime pay and tracking of employees’ hours worked. An investigation by the U.S. Department of Labor’s Wage and Hour Division revealed the dealership wasn’t maintaining accurate records of the hours many of its salespeople worked.

Tampa travel agencies sued for sexually hostile workplace

07/13/2011
Four Amigos Travel and Top Dog Travel are facing a class-action lawsuit after the EEOC stepped in on behalf of telemarketers who accused the Tampa-based companies of condoning sexual harassment.

NLRB okays inflatable rat in protests at Brandon hospital

07/13/2011
The National Labor Relations Board has ruled the use of a 16-foot tall inflatable rat outside a hospital in Brandon does not violate the National Labor Relations Act, even though the hospital is not directly in conflict with the union. Unions have long used rats as symbols for businesses that oppose organized labor.

When age seems obvious factor, expect lengthy legal process

07/13/2011
Here’s something to consider when terminating an older employee, while leaving younger ones in place: If your organization is sued, don’t expect the case to be tossed early on. Instead, brace for protracted litigation.

Employee feels slighted by promotion process? That’s not enough to win retaliation lawsuit

07/13/2011

Some employees believe that anything the least bit negative that happens to them after they file a lawsuit is grounds for a second lawsuit alleging retaliation. That’s not true. To constitute retaliation, an employer has to do something that would dissuade a reasonable employee from filing a lawsuit in the first place.

Appeals court: No second chance to appeal lower court’s decision on retaliation damages

07/13/2011
An employee who won a discrimination case after he filed an appeal has lost his second appeal. He had claimed it wasn’t enough that a lower court had ordered almost one million dollars in back pay. He said he should have been promoted, too.

Court: Veterans can’t sue for bias under Title VII or Florida Civil Rights Act

07/13/2011
The 11th Cir­cuit Court of Appeals has refused to recognize veterans as a protected class under either Title VII of the federal Civil Rights Act or under the Florida Civil Rights Act. That means claims based on military service must generally be brought under the Uniformed Serv­ices Em­ployment and Reemployment Rights Act (USERRA).

OK to cut position of worker on FMLA leave–if you can prove FMLA status didn’t affect decision

07/13/2011

Employees who take FMLA leave are usually eligible for reinstatement, but not always. If you were going to eliminate the position anyway, the employee may be out of luck. Before you deny reinstatement, be sure you can clearly show that the position was cut for reasons completely unrelated to the employee’s FMLA leave.

Beware denying ‘vacation’ request in disguise

07/13/2011

If there’s no use-it-or-lose-it policy in place, employees can easily stockpile weeks of vacation or personal leave. Should they become ill, they may try to use that time as a substitute for FMLA leave. If an employee asks you to approve an especially long vacation, and you suspect the underlying reason may be a covered condition under the FMLA, beware automatically rejecting the request.