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Employment Law

Court: Business burden won’t be allowed to stall EEOC case

12/09/2010

In a sign that courts will give the EEOC great latitude in investigating systemic discrimination charges, media giant Kable News Company has been ordered to provide the commission with a comprehensive employee list. The message for employers: Obstructionist legal strategies probably won’t work in EEOC cases.

EEOC: Harassment all in the family at Alton restaurant

12/09/2010
Tony’s Restaurant, a venerable eatery in Alton, Ill., outside St. Louis, has agreed to settle sexual harassment charges brought by the EEOC on behalf of three teenage girls who claimed they were victimized by a member of the family that has owned the restaurant for more than 50 years.

Calls during FMLA leave lead to emotional-distress lawsuit

12/09/2010
Teach this simple lesson to supervisors who have employees out on FMLA leave: Leave them alone unless there’s a good reason to contact them. Calls and visits can lead to lawsuits claiming emotional distress.

Track discipline by type, punish everyone fairly

12/09/2010

Employers that mete out similar discipline for similar kinds of misconduct rarely lose subsequent lawsuits, even if the court considering the case thinks the punishment was excessive or a poor business decision. What matters is evenhanded application of the rules, not whether the rule is good or bad.

Are government workers protected against bias based on marital status? 7th Circuit passes

12/09/2010

Public employees have rights that private-sector employees don’t, including exercising constitutional rights like free speech and due process. That’s because constitutional rights apply to government actions. But do public employees enjoy the right to be free from retaliation based on marital association? Faced with that question, the 7th Circuit recently punted.

Beware trend: Workers acting as own lawyers

12/09/2010
If former employees decide to sue, they’ll find themselves competing for lawyers to represent them. Increasingly, those former employees simply file their own lawsuits. And judges give them every possible break since they aren’t expected to know the tricks of the legal trade.

Take careful notes during all exit interviews

12/09/2010

Employees often reveal their true feelings during an exit interview, and they frequently wind up burning bridges in the process. Smart employers take notes during exit interviews, especially if they hear something that makes them wonder whether the employee should ever have been hired in the first place, let alone rehired for any future openings.

How should we tally overtime pay when employees earn different amounts at different times?

12/09/2010
Q. We have employees who work on-call and often accrue overtime hours. They receive a different amount of pay for on-call work than regularly scheduled work time. How do we calculate their regular rate of pay for overtime purposes?

Can arbitration agreements include clause waiving employees’ statutory claims?

12/09/2010
Q. I am wondering if we can contract with employees to resolve employment-related disputes, including statutory claims, with binding arbitration. Are there any problems with this?

What should we know about running credit checks on job applicants?

12/09/2010
Q. Our company is hiring a new finance director and we’re planning to do credit checks on serious job candidates. Are there any legal issues that we should be aware of?