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Statesville Compare Foods settles bias claim with EEOC

06/26/2009

For the second time in a year, a North Carolina Compare Foods store has settled discrimination charges with the EEOC. As in the earlier case, this one—involving a store in Statesville—involved accusations that workers had been fired because they weren’t Hispanic.

Does this person have a case? We withdrew an offer after she quit her old job and moved

06/26/2009

Q. We offered a job to an applicant who was located out of state. We orally promised her a position and gave her a start date. As the date grew closer and we were finalizing the offer letter, there was a hiring freeze and we had to withdraw the offer. She has now threatened to sue us. Does she have a case?

How closely can we monitor contractors without creating an employment relationship?

06/26/2009

Q. Can I require an independent contractor to provide weekly sales reports (number of contacts made, closed sales, contracts sent, etc.) without turning our arrangement into an employer/employee relationship?

Suit on tax credits for hiring poor workers moves forward

06/26/2009

A state court of appeals recently ruled that Richmond-based Dicon Fiberoptics adequately pleaded its claim against California’s Franchise Tax Board in a case involving a tax credit for hiring disadvantaged workers.

Can we implement an anti-nepotism policy?

06/26/2009

Q. To prevent productivity and morale problems, we would like to adopt a policy stating the company will not hire the spouses of current employees. Would this be lawful?

Once again, feds delay E-Verify for govt. contractors

06/26/2009

For the fourth time in a year, the federal government has pushed back the effective date of a rule that would require certain federal contractors and subcontractors to use the government’s online E-Verify system.

Track résumés: More applicants = more suits

06/26/2009

If you have a fairly informal application process, now’s the time to firm it up. The prolonged economic downturn means you’re receiving many more applications and résumés than normal. And that means more potential for lawsuits from unsuccessful job-seekers.

What’s the best interview question you’ve asked?

06/26/2009

Interview questions range from the simple (“Tell me about yourself.”) to the silly (“If you were an animal, what kind would you be?”). Here are some suggestions of effective questions from readers of The HR Specialist Forum.

Remind bosses: No talk of pregnancy plans

06/26/2009

Are some of your organization’s leaders still stuck in the Dark Ages when it comes to attitudes about pregnancy, childbirth and child care? You might be a few off-base questions away from a pregnancy discrimination lawsuit. Remind managers and supervisors to keep their opinions on mothers and motherhood to themselves.

EEOC seeks broad subpoenas? Ask to have them limited

06/26/2009

If the EEOC thinks a complaint it receives may have national implications and wants more information, it has the power to expand its investigation. The agency can seek subpoenas to demand a long list of records from your company as it seeks to develop a broader, perhaps national case against you. The good news is that federal courts generally will scale down the request if you ask.