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Finding Talent and Labor Laws March 7, 2012 Presented by Grace H. Lee, Esq. Hiring New Employees. Anti-Discrimination Laws: Federal and state laws prohibit hiring procedures which discriminate on the basis of protected characteristics
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Finding Talent and Labor Laws March 7, 2012 Presented by Grace H. Lee, Esq.
Hiring New Employees • Anti-Discrimination Laws: Federal and state laws prohibit hiring procedures which discriminate on the basis of protected characteristics • Applies to discrimination in: hiring, promotion, discharge, pay, fringe benefits, job training, classification, referral, and other aspects of employment, on the basis of various protected characteristics.
D.C. Adds: Sexual Orientation Marital Status Matriculation Family Responsibilities Familial Status Gender Identity Personal Appearance Political Affiliation Genetic Information Other Categories Protected Categories Federal: • Sex • Race • Age • Religion • National Origin • Color • Disability • Veterans Status • Pregnancy
Hiring New Employees • Hiring process • Consistency is key (application, interview, background check, etc). • Pre-Employment Inquiries • Interviewing Do’s and Don'ts (illegal questions) • Testing (ensure consistency) • ADAAA • Respond to request for reasonable accommodation • Background Checks (Credit & Criminal) • Can be done (and, in some cases, it is mandatory) • Must comply with the Fair Credit Reporting Act (FCRA) and applicable state laws • Must notify the applicant • Offense must be job related to be used as basis of employment decision
Hiring: The At-Will Doctrine • The “at-will” employment relationship means you may terminate for any reason or no reason at any time, with or without notice. • Caveat: You cannot terminate an at-will employee for an illegal reason (i.e. discrimination, retaliation) or in a manner contrary to an agreement. • Offer letter v. employment agreement • Offer Letter • Important if you have weak or non-existent employment policies or employee manual. • Can be used to clarify issues raised during the recruitment process and set expectations from both parties. • Typically not for a term and should contain affirmation of at-will status. • Employment Contract • Typically at odds with the at-will concept, and it should be drafted as such. • Used as a recruitment and retention tool. • Used to protect highly sensitive and proprietary information through the use of restrictive covenants. • Normally recommended only for executives, professionals or confidential (i.e., IT) positions. • Ensure consistency with employee handbook
Hiring: Immigration Compliance • Form I-9 • Verify that employees are legally authorized to work in the U.S. • Does not apply to volunteers • Does not apply to independent contractors • Refrain from discrimination against individuals based on national origin, race, or citizenship • Must complete Form I-9 within three business days of the first day of work for pay • Begin I-9 process after you offer the job and the employee accepts • Social security number is voluntary • Do not ask request specific documents – let the employee pick from list of options on the form • Maintain for three years after the date of hire, OR one year after the date of termination, whichever is later • Keep I-9 separate from other personnel file documents
Wage & Hour and Leave Issues • The Law: • The Family & Medical Leave Act of 1993 (FMLA) • The Fair Labor Standards Act • Exempt/Non-Exempt Status • Independent Contractors • Alternative Work Arrangements (e.g. flextime) • Consistency is key. Employees must have equal access to work arrangements, to avoid discrimination claims • Create policies (e.g. Telecommuting Policy and Agreement)
Family and Medical Leave Act • Federal law and District of Columbia • Updated regulations for Federal FMLA and DC FMLA • Federal FMLA provides up to 12 weeks of family and medical leave per 12 month period • Federal FMLA provides up to 26 weeks of military family leave in a 12 month period • DC FMLA provides up to 16 weeks of family leave AND 16 weeks of medical leave in a 24-month period • Federal and D.C. FMLA run concurrently, if applicable • Should comply with the law that provides employee with greater benefit
FMLA Coverage • Federal • Must be employed by an employer with 50 or more employees in a 75 mile radius of the place the employee works • Employee must have worked at least 1,250 hours during the previous 12 months prior to the request for leave • DC • Employer must have at least 20 employees • Employee must have worked at least 1,000 hours in the 12-month period immediately preceding the request for leave • Employment must be without a break in service
FMLA Leave Benefits • Job Security • Must hold position • Employee entitled to return to same or equivalent job • May fill position temporarily until employee returns • Can eliminate job if would have done so even if employee not out on leave • Unpaid leave • Benefits • Employer must continue to receive benefits during the leave • Health insurance must continue as if the employee was still working • No loss of benefit or seniority accrued prior to the start of the employee’s leave
Federal and DC FMLAReasons for Leave • Birth of a child or to care for a newborn child; • Placement of a child with the employee for adoption or foster care, or placement of a child with the employee for whom the employee permanently assumes and discharges parental responsibility; • Employee is needed to care for a “family member” with a serious health condition; • Employee’s own ‘serious health condition’ that makes the employee unable to perform the functions of the job
Military Leave Entitlement • Under Federal Military FMLA an eligible employee may take leave for the following reasons: • To address certain qualifying exigencies arising out of the fact that the spouse, or a son, daughter or parent of the employee is on ‘covered active duty’ (or has been notified of an impending call or order to covered active duty) in the Armed Forces • Up to 12 workweeks of leave in a 12-month period (rolling back) • To address military caregiver leave to care for a son, daughter, parent, or next of kin who is an injured or ill servicemember or veteran • Up to 26 workweeks of leave in a 12-month period (rolling forward)
DC Accrued Sick and Safe Leave Act • ASSLA provides paid sick leave for absences due to the employee’s or family member's medical condition, domestic violence or sexual abuse • Up to seven days of paid leave per year • Reasons for leave • Absence resulting from physical or mental illness, injury, or medical condition of the employee • Absence resulting from obtaining professional medical diagnosis or care, preventative medical care (must make reasonable efforts to schedule leave so it does not unduly disrupt school’s operations) • Absence for purpose for caring for a child, parents, spouse, domestic partner, or any other family member who has any of the conditions or needs for diagnosis or care described above • Absence if the employee or employee’s family member is a victim of stalking, domestic violence, or sexual abuse
Wage and Hour • Federal law - Fair Labor Standards Act (FLSA) • DC same as Federal for exempt v. nonexempt • Two Classifications • Overtime eligible (non-exempt) • Entitled to overtime pay (one and half times the regular rate of pay) for hours worked over forty in a workweek • Paid hourly • Salaried employees can be overtime eligible • Non-Overtime eligible (exempt) • Paid the same amount regardless of number of hours worked • Must meet certain requirements to be exempt from overtime pay
Employee or Independent Contractor • Legal Tests (no more 20-factor test) • Integral part of business • Permanency of relationship • Who supplies facilities and equipment • Opportunities for profit and loss • Provides this work for other employers • Managed by company employees or independent • Independent Contractor Agreement
Employment Separation • Separation and Release Agreements (Severance) • Necessary in some circumstances • Troublesome termination • Protected category (i.e. race, disability) • High salary • High profile • Confer with counsel to ensure that the agreements properly protect the company and are legally enforceable.
Employment Separation • Separation and Release Agreements • Typical provisions: • Date of termination - mutual parting, with non-disparagement • Severance with specific terms (withhold taxes) • General Release (for all entities), with promise not to sue • OWBPA language, consult a lawyer, 21 days to consider, 7 days to revoke ADEA release • Survival of Restrictive Covenants
Employment Separation • Exit Interviews • Post-Employment Benefits Entitlement • The Return of Property & Confidential Information • Company Confidentiality Policy