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Terminations

Feel free to fire! There’s no reason you have to tolerate threatening behavior

10/12/2012
Have you had it with an em­­ployee who can’t seem to get along with others and who constantly tries to intimidate co-workers? If warnings don’t help, fire him.

Common beef, even vulgarity, won’t rule out unemployment

10/09/2012
Employees who get into arguments may be violating workplace rules. But that doesn’t mean that firing them cuts off possible unemployment compensation benefits.

Haven’t been enforcing call-in policy? Start now

10/09/2012
If you haven’t been enforcing your rule requiring absent employees to call in every day, start now. Just make sure employees know you plan to enforce it going forward.

Slow business forces RIF? Most staffing decisions won’t trigger bias liability

10/09/2012
If you need to conduct a reduction in force because of slow business, it’s perfectly legal to move employees around to better meet your new needs even as you lay off others. Few judges will second-guess those moves, even if the main im­pact is on one employee who happens to be a member of a protected class.

Document business realities, performance ­criteria that led to job-cutting decisions

10/09/2012
During tough economic times, businesses often have to cut labor budgets and eliminate positions. Smart employers make sure they document that process with facts and figures—just in case an affected employee decides to sue and tries to parlay a few stray, insensitive comments into the “real” reason she lost her job.

OSHA pops Champagne Demolition for retaliation

10/09/2012
Champagne Demolition in Albany faces an OSHA lawsuit claiming that it illegally fired an employee for reporting improper asbestos removal practices at a company worksite.

Tell bosses: Careless comments cause lawsuits

10/09/2012
The only appropriate response to a pregnancy announcement is “Congratulations.” No smart aleck comments, no questions about family size, no wondering aloud how long the employee expects to be out. If the pregnant employee asks about leave, her boss should refer her to HR.

Employee wouldn’t dance to Bojangle’s manager’s tune

10/02/2012
A Greensboro-area Bojangle’s restaurant has agreed to pay $33,426 to a former female employee after she was harassed, retaliated against and fired for refusing her manager’s advances.

How to guarantee a lawsuit: Fire good employee right after she asks for FMLA leave

10/01/2012
Here’s a recipe for a lawsuit: Terminate a good employee who just told you she needs FMLA leave and has scheduled surgery. The timing alone will be enough to let the lawsuit proceed.

Employee late in submitting his FMLA certification? Don’t just fire! Find out why

09/27/2012

When employees take FMLA leave, you can require they obtain written certification from a doctor to confirm the underlying serious health condition. FMLA rules say you must give the employee “at least 15 calendar days to obtain the medical certification.” But take note: It’s not smart to terminate an employee simply because you didn’t receive the paperwork on time.