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Employment Law

OK to pay commissions on a flat-rate basis–it won’t violate FLSA commission exemption

09/24/2010

For years, the DOL has argued that commissions must be based on a percentage of sales in order to be valid. But now the 3rd Circuit has approved a different form of commissioned sales—one in which employees are paid based not on the total amount of the sale, but on other factors such as whether the sale was made on an outgoing sales call or an incoming one.

Hazleton’s illegal-immigrant law overturned: Federal law prevails–for now

09/24/2010
The 3rd Circuit Court of Appeals has overturned the city of Hazleton’s local ordinances that attempted to regulate employment of undocumented immigrants. The court reasoned that the federal government has the sole authority to oversee illegal immigration.

Pennsylvania House considers mandatory sick leave bill

09/24/2010

A Pennsylvania House of Representatives committee has begun considering legislation that would require all employers to provide some paid sick leave for employees. The Healthy Family, Healthy Workplaces Act would require employers with 10 or more employees to provide at least one hour of sick leave for every 40 hours worked, up to a maximum of 52 hours per year.

Beware! Your ‘neutral’ rule may invite lawsuit

09/24/2010
So your work rules are fair and neutral. There’s no way employees belonging to a protected class would sue you, alleging the rule has a disparate impact. Guess again—it happens. Consider this recent case, which has resulted in years of legal wrangling.

Ensure fair distribution of work opportunities

09/24/2010

Does your company employ salespeople who are responsible for meeting certain benchmark goals? If so, be sure you have some way to check that everyone competes on an even footing. That includes ensuring that things like territories and leads are distributed in a way that doesn’t favor members of one group at the expense of another.

EEOC: Railroad had two disciplinary tracks–one for whites, one for blacks

09/24/2010
CSX, the Jacksonville-based freight railroad, faces racial discrimination charges after it disciplined a black train engineer and conductor working out of its Cincinnati yard.

Get it in writing: Creating effective and legal job descriptions

09/24/2010
Job descriptions are the cornerstone of communication between management and staff. Good job descriptions make sure bosses and employees alike know what kind of performance is expected. They’re the basis of every effective performance-appraisal system. At a minimum, a job description should include these elements:

How seriously should we take allegations of female-on-male sexual harassment?

09/24/2010
Q. A male employee recently complained to HR that a female co-worker was sexually harassing him. Do I have to investigate this claim the same as I would a claim by a woman against a male co-worker?

SeaWorld fined $75,000 in orca trainer’s death

09/23/2010
OSHA has cited SeaWorld Orlando for three safety violations following the death of marine mammal trainer Dawn Brancheau earlier this year.

Strike 3 for bill banning applicant credit checks?

09/23/2010

The California State Senate and State Assembly have approved a bill that would restrict the use of credit reports by employers that conduct background checks on job applicants and employees. But enactment isn’t a sure thing, based on the recent history of similar legislation.