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Employment Law

Separate the harassed and the harasser, fast

07/09/2010

Here’s a problem that is easily solved. An employee complains that she’s being harassed by a co-worker. If you can easily separate the two, do so sooner rather than later. Merely having a complaint lodged may be enough to stop the harasser. But his continued presence can still mean you’re allowing a sexually hostile work environment to exist.

Public employees have no legal ‘right’ to have affairs with their subordinates

07/09/2010
The U.S. Constitution guarantees citizens the right to free association without government interference. But what about the right of public-sector employees to free association? Can a public employer punish an employee for having a romantic relationship with a subordinate?

Commercial pilots claim FAA retirement plan broke state law

07/08/2010

When Congress raised commercial pilots’ mandatory retirement age from 60 to 65, not all pilots were pleased. Pilots who had been forced to retire under the 60-years-of-age rule weren’t grandfathered into the new system. The pilots are seeking back pay and lost wages under state laws and the Federal Tort Claims Act.

EEOC wrings $500,000 out of Everdry in harassment settlement

07/08/2010
Everdry Marketing and Management, a waterproofing firm, has paid more than $500,000 to satisfy a judgment won by a group of 13 women who filed sexual harassment claims against the company.

Don’t sweat a little confusion when worker returns from FMLA

07/08/2010

If an employer has to move people and equipment around to cover an employee’s work during FMLA leave, it may be difficult to reintegrate the returning employee right away. That’s OK. Minor delays aren’t enough to support an interference-with-FMLA-rights lawsuit.

Co-worker’s single slur isn’t enough to justify lawsuit

07/08/2010
Here’s some common sense from the 2nd Circuit Court of Appeals: A co-worker’s isolated idiotic comment isn’t enough to support an entire discrimination lawsuit.

Include federal jury service protection in your employee handbook and policies

07/08/2010
Make sure your employee handbook covers federal jury service and that supervisors don’t punish employees who serve on federal juries. Employees who are called to serve on juries in federal courts are protected from discharge because of their service.

Courts more reluctant to extend employee deadlines for filing lawsuits

07/08/2010

You should be able to rest easy after an employee misses a deadline to file a lawsuit. In the past, courts have been lenient when it comes to those deadlines, especially if the employee doesn’t have an attorney. But now the tide seems to be turning. Courts are beginning to get stricter about deadlines.

Discovered hostile environment? Fix the problem, ensure there’s no repeat … and rest easy

07/08/2010

Sometimes despite your efforts to prevent it, a complaint leads to solid evidence that a female employee has endured severe sexual harassment at the hands of co-workers. What’s your next move? And will that move enable you to prevent a successful lawsuit? If you correct the problem and prevent any further similar harassment, your company will be in the clear after 300 days.

Long Island firefighters win benefits in age-bias settlement

07/08/2010
Long Island’s Bayville Fire Department will allow volunteer firefighters to accrue length-of-service credit past age 65 as part of an age discrimination settlement with the EEOC. The volunteers accrue service time and then receive bonuses based on that time. The payments essentially amount to a pension.